WEDR

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WEDR
City of license Miami/Fort Lauderdale
Broadcast area South Florida
Branding "99 Jamz"
Slogan South Florida's #1 for Today's Hip Hop and R&B
First air date 1960s
Frequency 99.1 (MHz)
Format Mainstream Urban
ERP 100,000 watts
Callsign meaning Eurith D. Rivers (former Georgia Governor, same person WGOV Valdosta, Georgia is named for)
Owner Cox Broadcasting
Website http://wedr.com/

WEDR, 99 JAMZ, is an urban-formatted radio station that serves the South Florida region that is licensed to Miami. WEDR has an unusually wide music selection for a mainstream urban-formatted radio station that ranges from typical hip-hop and R&B to reggaeton and soca music. This is due to the fact that South Florida is a very diversified region that has various music tastes. WEDR is owned by Cox Broadcasting alongside sister stations WHQT and WFLC, and has their studios located in Hollywood.

WEDR has an unusually shaped coverage area due to the station moving its antannae from a class C to a class C1 on a new tower. The main reasoning behind this so that the station's signal doesn't interfer with the close frequencies that serves southwestern Florida. It also began broadcasting in IBOC digital radio, using the HD Radio system from iBiquity in Summer 2005.

Contents

The WEDR call letters have been in South Florida since the 1960s when the station's then owner Ed Rivers acquired them from an AM radio station in Birmingham, Alabama.WEDR-FM was the first station in Miami to play rock music. By 1971,the rock format was dropped in favor of Soul/R&B. However, urban formats have been on the 99.1 frequency in some form or another, going all the way back to the early 70's when it played Disco as a Rhythmic Contemporary Hit station. In early 1990, WEDR changed slogans from "Starforce 99" to "99 JAMZ", an Urban Contemporary with a notoriously wide variety playlist that ranged from R&B, Soul, and rap to Reggae and Soca on the weekends. Extraordinarily, WEDR maintained the urban contemporary format through media consolidation with Cox Broadcasting purchasing it and former rival WHQT in the 1990's all to into the early 2000s. During those years as an urban contemporary, it held down the top spot in the market and the slogan The Station for Every Generation due to its wide variety playlist. However, in 2003, when former program director and morning drive host, James T, migrated from it to sister station WHQT, "Hot 105FM". WEDR began to skew more towards current format being a Mainstream Urban with the slogan "99 JAMZ, South Florida's #1 for More of Today's Hip Hop and R&B", to compete with it new crosstown rival, Clear Channel-owned WMIB, "103.5 the Beat". But they do still play slower R&B and Classic Soul songs during Night JAMZ show in the overnight hours. As of October 2006, WMIB has since modified its format to Urban AC to compete with WHQT, leaving WEDR to compete with Rhythmic Hip Hop/R&B rival WPOW.

Weekdays

  • The Big Lip Bandit Morning Show with Supa Cindy and Benji Brown 6-10AM
  • Mid-days with Shelby Rushin & DJ Suicide 10AM-2PM
  • Afternoon Jumpoff & Drive at Five with Lorenzo "Ice Tea" Thomas & DJ KD/DJ Irie 2-6PM
  • The Take Over with K. Foxx & DJ Khaled 6-11PM
  • 11PM-2AM
  • Night JAMZ with Kim Bell (slow jams) 2-5AM
  • Gospel JAMZ 5-6AM

Friday Nights

  • The Basement Explosion" With King Waggy Tee And Patrick Ewing (The Hype Man) 11PM-2AM

Saturdays

  • Lil' Bear 2-6AM
  • Community Voices with Cheryl Mizell 6-7AM
  • DJ Ice T 7-11AM
  • Lady D 11AM-3PM
  • Jammin' Derrick B 3-7PM
  • 7PM-Midnight

Sundays

  • Dins Midnight-6AM
  • Sunday Morning Gospel with Dallas Manuel 6-10AM
  • Wendell Ford (gospel) 10AM-2PM
  • DJ Ice T 2-6PM
  • Lady D 6-10PM
  • Kim Bell 10PM-2AM
  • Night JAMZ (slow jams) 2-5AM
  • Gospel JAMZ 5-6AM

  • General Manager Jerry Rushin
  • Program Director Derrick Baker
  • Music Director Shelby Rushin
  • Promotions Director Maestro Powell
  • Public Affairs Director Cheryl Mizell
  • General Sales Manager Jerome Hutchinson
  • Local Sales Manager Jo Castro


FM radio stations in the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood, Florida market (Arbitron #12)
By frequency
Miami-Dade County
(Arbitron #12)
87.7¹ | 88.1 | 88.3 | 88.5 | 88.9 | 89.7 | 90.3 | 90.5 | 91.3 | 92.3 | 93.1 | 93.9 | 94.9 | 95.7 | 96.5 | 97.3 | 98.3 | 99.1 | 99.9 | 100.7 | 101.5 | 102.7 | 103.5 | 105.1 | 105.9 | 106.7 | 107.5

¹ Audio for TV channel 6 (WTVJ/NBC)

By callsign
Operating stations
WAFG | WAMR | WBGG-FM | WCMQ-FM | WDNA | WEAT | WEDR | WFLC | WHDR | WHYI | WIRP | WKIS | WKPX | WLRN-FM | WLVE | WLYF | WMCU | WMGE | WMIB-FM | WMXJ | WPOW | WRGP | WRMA | WRMF | WRTO | WTVJ | WVUM | WXDJ

Satellite Radio Local Traffic/Weather: XM Channel 230 | Sirius Channel 153

Defunct stations
none
Other
Florida Radio Markets

Daytona Beach · Fort Myers · Ft. Walton Beach · Gainesville/Ocala · Jacksonville AM/FM · Key West/The Florida Keys · Lakeland/Winter Haven · Melbourne/Titusville · Miami AM/FM · Orlando AM/FM · Panama City · Pensacola AM/FM · Sebring · Tallahassee AM/FM · Sarasota · Tampa/St. Petersburg AM/FM · Vero Beach · West Palm Beach/Boca Raton AM/FM

Shortwave: WYFR at SW 5.950
See also: List of radio stations in Florida and List of United States radio markets


Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.