WPRB
File:Wprb.gif | |
City of license | Princeton, New Jersey |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Central Jersey Delaware Valley |
Frequency | 103.3 MHz (also on HD Radio) |
First air date | December 6, 1940 (campus AM broadcast) November 10, 1955 (FM broadcast) |
Format | Analog/HD1: Freeform HD2: Indian (Radio Chai) |
ERP | 14,000 watts |
HAAT | 222 meters |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 53567 |
Owner | Princeton Broadcasting Service, Inc. |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | http://www.wprb.com/ |
WPRB (103.3 FM) is a commercial, non-profit FM radio station licensed to serve Princeton, New Jersey. The station is owned by Princeton Broadcasting Service, Inc., and broadcasts a free-form format, including classical, jazz, electronic, folk, metal, world, soul, blues, rock and opera.[1] Its broadcast tower is shared with WKXW "New Jersey 101.5"[2] and is located in Lawrence Township northeast of Trenton at (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.).[3]
The majority of on-air and management staff consists of Princeton University students, in addition to a board of trustees comprising Princeton University alumni. WPRB also provides coverage of many of Princeton University's varsity sporting events and is in the process of restarting its news department. One of its disc jockeys, Jon Solomon, has hosted a 24-hour Christmas music marathon every year but one since 1988.
WPRB uses HD Radio, and broadcasts Indian-formatted "Radio Chai" on its HD2 channel.[4]
History
WPRB was founded as WPRU in 1940 by H. Grant Theis, a Princeton University student at the time. It often is cited as the oldest commercially licensed campus radio station in the United States.[5] WPRU became WPRB in 1955, and in that same year became an FM station, making it the first college FM station in the United States. WPRB was a pioneer in FM Stereo broadcasting, transmitting a stereo signal beginning in 1964.
In 1986, Spin Magazine named WPRB the best commercial college station in the country.[citation needed]
After decades of operation under an advertising-supported business model, in 2006 WPRB switched to a listener-supported model (although it remains a commercially licensed station). This proved to be successful enough that in 2009 WPRB was able to acquire a Princeton student magazine, the Nassau Weekly. Nassau Weekly was founded in 1979 by Princeton students including David Remnick, who later became the editor of The New Yorker.[5]
Signal Note
WPRB is a full class B signal. Its service contour covers all of Central New Jersey and portions of the Philadelphia and New York City media markets.[6]
WPRB is short-spaced to two other stations: WKTU "103.5 KTU" (licensed to serve New York City) and WARM-FM "Warm 103.3" (licensed to serve York, Pennsylvania). WPRB and WKTU operate on adjacent channels and are only 51 miles apart.[7] The minimum distance between two Class B stations operating on adjacent channels according to current FCC rules is 105 miles.[8] WPRB and WARM-FM operate on the same channel and are only 101 miles apart.[9] The minimum distance between two Class B stations operating on the same channel according to current FCC rules is 150 miles.[8]
References
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External links
- WPRB official website
- WPRB News
- WPRB History
- WPRB Programming Schedule
- The official WPRB blog
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WPRB
- Radio-Locator information on WPRB
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for WPRB
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