WTRB

Radio station in Ripley, Tennessee
35°43′46″N 89°32′33″W / 35.72944°N 89.54250°W / 35.72944; -89.54250Translator(s)104.9 MHz (W285FL)LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsite1570wtrb.com

WTRB (1570 AM, "Music Country") is an American radio station licensed to serve Ripley, Tennessee in Lauderdale county. The station is presently owned by WTRB, Inc. (Palmer Johnson, President) It airs a country music format.[1]

The station went on the air December 11, 1954 and was assigned the "WTRB" call sign by the Federal Communications Commission.[2]

History

In March 1959, WTRB made national headlines when James W. Porter purchased fifteen minutes of air time on the station. Porter began his broadcast by shattering several records then leaving the station silent for the rest of the fifteen minutes after proposing a "National Can the Racket League" as a protest against rock'n'roll music.[3]

Don Paris:

The late Don Paris started with WTRB when the station began broadcasting in 1954. Mr Paris had been the station manager until retiring in 2007 for health reasons.

Ownership

In September 2004, West Tennessee Regional Broadcasting Inc. (Phillip Ennis, president) announced that they had reached an agreement to acquire WTRB from Williams Communications Inc. (Walton E. Williams Jr., president/director) for a reported sale price of $265,000.[4] In August 2009 West Tennessee Regional Broadcasting reached an agreement to sell WTRB to Palmer Johnson, a Contract Broadcast Engineer from Kennett, MO.

References

  1. ^ "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on March 1, 2010.
  2. ^ "Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau.
  3. ^ "Rock'n'Roll Critic Offers 15 Minutes Of Radio Silence". Bennington Evening Banner. 1959-03-20. James W. Porter began his quarter-hour on Station WTRB by shattering several records and then proposing a "National Can the Racket League." Announced Porter: "Friends, are you tense, nervous, jittery? Chances are you are overturned. You may have tried other stations without success, but now we offer you an amazing new silence." Thirteen minutes of silence followed except for two breaks to reassure listeners their radios didn't need repair. John Stewart, WTRB manager, said telephone callers were 100 per cent against the silence.
  4. ^ "Changing Hands - 9/27/2004". Broadcasting & Cable. 2004-09-27.

External links

  • WTRB official website
  • ‹The template AMQ is being considered for deletion.›  WTRB in the FCC AM station database
  • WTRB in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
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Country radio stations in the state of Tennessee
Stations
Defunct
See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
NPR
oldies
religious
rock
sports
top 40
urban
other radio stations in Tennessee


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