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Coordinates: 41°49′44″N 80°49′26″W / 41.829°N 80.824°W / 41.829; -80.824
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'''WZOO-FM''' is an [[FM broadcasting|FM]] [[radio station]] in [[Edgewood, Ohio]], United States, broadcasting at 102.5 MHz with a [[classic hits]] radio format. It is one of four stations in the Media One Group's Ashtabula cluster, the others being [[WFUN (AM)|WFUN]], [[WREO-FM]], [[WYBL]] (FM) and [[WFXJ-FM]] - all of which were sold off by [[Clear Channel Communications|Clear Channel]] in September 2007.
'''WZOO-FM''' is an [[FM broadcasting|FM]] [[Radio broadcasting|radio station]] in [[Edgewood, Ohio]], United States, broadcasting at 102.5 MHz with a [[classic hits]] radio format. It is one of four stations in the Media One Group's Ashtabula cluster, the others being [[WFUN (AM)]], [[WREO-FM]], [[WYBL]] (FM) and [[WFXJ-FM]] - all of which were sold off by Clear Channel (now known today as [[iHeartMedia]]) in September 2007.


WZOO-FM is not connected in any way with [[WZOO (AM)]], an AM radio station in [[Asheboro, North Carolina]] sharing the same callsign (see below).
WZOO-FM is not connected in any way with [[WZOO (AM)]], an [[AM broadcasting|AM]] radio station in [[Asheboro, North Carolina]] sharing the same callsign (see below).


==History==
==History==
WZOO was founded by John A. Bulmer, an experienced broadcaster who was awarded a number of FCC permits to construct new FM stations in Ohio, Indiana and Glens Falls, New York (Lake Luzerne). When Bulmer constructed the new Ashtabula station on 102.5 MHz, he wanted something that rhymed with the 102 dial position. Mr. Bulmer desired the name ZOO. However, WZOO was already in use by an AM radio station in North Carolina.
WZOO was founded by John A. Bulmer, an experienced broadcaster who was awarded a number of FCC permits to construct new FM stations in [[Ohio]], [[Indiana]] and [[Glens Falls, New York]] ([[Lake Luzerne, New York|Lake Luzerne]]). When Bulmer constructed the new Ashtabula station on 102.5 [[Hertz|MHz]], he wanted something that rhymed with the 102 dial position. Mr. Bulmer desired the name ZOO. However, WZOO was already in use by an AM radio station in North Carolina.


Bulmer was able to take advantage of an FCC policy that allowed him to be granted the WZOO call sign on FM (as WZOO-FM) by obtaining the written permission from [[WZOO (AM)]] in [[Asheboro, North Carolina]]. Mr. Bulmer paid the licensee of WZOO (AM) $1,000 to grant him permission. Hence, "102 ZOO" was born. WZOO-FM was one of five construction permits granted to Bulmer in the late 1980s/early '90s. At that time, prior to FCC auctions for frequencies, Bulmer discovered a not-widely-known FCC policy whereby if a filing window closed and there were no applications filed, the FCC would then grant a construction permit (authority to build the radio station) under "First Come/First Served" processing rules. While the general public was often stampeding to the next newly opened filing window, Bulmer was combing the FCC's records for windows that had just closed to ascertain what FCC filing windows drew no applications for a particular community.
Bulmer was able to take advantage of an [[Federal Communications Commission|FCC]] policy that allowed him to be granted the WZOO call sign on FM (as WZOO-FM) by obtaining the written permission from [[WZOO (AM)]] in [[Asheboro, North Carolina]]. Mr. Bulmer paid the licensee of WZOO (AM) [[Dollar sign|$]]1,000 to grant him permission. Hence, "102 ZOO" was born. WZOO-FM was one of five construction permits granted to Bulmer in the late 1980s/early '90s. At that time, prior to FCC auctions for frequencies, Bulmer discovered a not-widely-known FCC policy whereby if a filing window closed and there were no applications filed, the FCC would then grant a construction permit (authority to build the radio station) under "First Come/First Served" processing rules. While the general public was often stampeding to the next newly opened filing window, Bulmer was combing the FCC's records for windows that had just closed to ascertain what FCC filing windows drew no applications for a particular community.


As a result, Mr. Bulmer received construction permits to construct new FM stations in Edgewood, Ohio (Ashtabula, Ohio, WZOO-FM), North Baltimore, Ohio (WHMQ FM, Findlay, Ohio, now [[WPFX]]), Royal Center, Indiana (WHZR (FM) "Hoosier 103" in Logansport, Indiana) and WJBI-FM in Windslow (Augusta-Waterville, Maine). Bulmer constructed three of those four stations (he gave the WJBI-FM permit back to the FCC, as the economy had hit the skids in the early 1990s) and built an entire group of new FM stations from construction permits. Arguably, 102 ZOO was Bulmer's most successful station in the group. Having constructed the station in late 1988 for approximately $140,000, he sold the station to Richard and David Rowley of Ashtabula in May 1999. Bulmer recently sold his last stations, WDOE (AM) and WBKX (FM) ("96 Kix FM") in Dunkirk-Fredonia, NY and he is now retired, spending time between homes in Pennsylvania and Florida.
As a result, Mr. Bulmer received construction permits to construct new FM stations in [[Edgewood, Ohio]] ([[Ashtabula, Ohio]], WZOO-FM), [[North Baltimore, Ohio]] (WHMQ FM, [[Findlay, Ohio]], now [[WPFX]]), [[Royal Center, Indiana]] (WHZR (FM) "Hoosier 103" in [[Logansport, Indiana]]) and WJBI-FM in [[Winslow, Maine|Windslow]] ([[Augusta, Maine|Augusta]]-[[Waterville, Maine]]). Bulmer constructed three of those four stations (he gave the WJBI-FM permit back to the [[Federal Communications Commission|FCC]], as the economy had hit the skids in the early 1990s) and built an entire group of new FM stations from [[Planning permission|construction permits]]. Arguably, 102 ZOO was Bulmer's most successful station in the group. Having constructed the station in late 1988 for approximately $140,000, he sold the station to Richard and David Rowley of Ashtabula in May 1999. Bulmer recently sold his last stations, WDOE (AM) and WBKX (FM) ("96 Kix FM") in [[Dunkirk, New York|Dunkirk]]-[[Fredonia, New York]] and he is now retired, spending time between homes in [[Pennsylvania]] and [[Florida]].


The station was most commonly known under the nickname "102 ZOO" right after going on the air in 1989 right up until October 2007. It has, however, changed its slogan several times from originally being "The Exciting FM" in 1989 and into the early 1990s when it operated under a Top 40 format.
The station was most commonly known under the nickname "102 ZOO" right after going on the air in 1989 right up until October 2007. It has, however, changed its slogan several times from originally being "The Exciting FM" in 1989 and into the early 1990s when it operated under a [[Top 40]] format.


Then, in the mid 90s, 102 ZOO changed format to become a Hot AC (Adult Contemporary) station. It also changed its slogan to "No Rap, No Metal, No Way". In the early 2000s, when the station was sold by local owners, brothers Richard & David Rowley to Clear Channel, 102 ZOO changed its slogan again to "Your Hit Music Station". The station remained Hot AC until flipping back to a Top 40 (CHR) format in September 2006. Then, in October 2007, Media One Group Switched 102 ZOO to an [[oldies]] format on October 5, 2007.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/30956/wzoo-goes-oldies|title=WZOO Goes Oldies|work=AllAccess.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radio-info.com/news/making-moves-morning-edition--7|title=Making Moves: Morning Edition|date=October 29, 2007|work=Radio-Info.com|access-date=July 11, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322064656/http://www.radio-info.com/news/making-moves-morning-edition--7|archive-date=March 22, 2012|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref>
Then, in the mid 90s, 102 ZOO changed format to become a Hot AC ([[Adult contemporary music|Adult Contemporary]]) station. It also changed its slogan to "No Rap, No Metal, No Way". In the early 2000s, when the station was sold by local owners, brothers Richard & David Rowley to Clear Channel (now [[iHeartMedia]]), 102 ZOO changed its slogan again to "Your Hit Music Station". The station remained Hot AC until flipping back to a [[Contemporary hit radio|Top 40 (CHR)]] format in September 2006. Then, in October 2007, Media One Group Switched 102 ZOO to an [[oldies]] format on October 5, 2007.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/30956/wzoo-goes-oldies|title=WZOO Goes Oldies|work=AllAccess.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radio-info.com/news/making-moves-morning-edition--7|title=Making Moves: Morning Edition|date=October 29, 2007|work=Radio-Info.com|access-date=July 11, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322064656/http://www.radio-info.com/news/making-moves-morning-edition--7|archive-date=March 22, 2012|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 02:45, 29 April 2021

WZOO-FM
Broadcast areaAshtabula, Ohio
Frequency102.5 MHz
BrandingMagic 102-5
Programming
FormatClassic hits
AffiliationsCleveland Cavaliers Radio Network
Ownership
Owner
  • Media One Group
  • (Media One Holdings, LLC)
WFUN, WREO-FM, WFXJ-FM, WYBL, WQGR
History
First air date
January 23, 1989
Call sign meaning
"102-ZOO," former slogan
Technical information
Facility ID7819
ClassA
ERP5,800 watts
HAAT100 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitemagicoldies1025.com

WZOO-FM is an FM radio station in Edgewood, Ohio, United States, broadcasting at 102.5 MHz with a classic hits radio format. It is one of four stations in the Media One Group's Ashtabula cluster, the others being WFUN (AM), WREO-FM, WYBL (FM) and WFXJ-FM - all of which were sold off by Clear Channel (now known today as iHeartMedia) in September 2007.

WZOO-FM is not connected in any way with WZOO (AM), an AM radio station in Asheboro, North Carolina sharing the same callsign (see below).

History

WZOO was founded by John A. Bulmer, an experienced broadcaster who was awarded a number of FCC permits to construct new FM stations in Ohio, Indiana and Glens Falls, New York (Lake Luzerne). When Bulmer constructed the new Ashtabula station on 102.5 MHz, he wanted something that rhymed with the 102 dial position. Mr. Bulmer desired the name ZOO. However, WZOO was already in use by an AM radio station in North Carolina.

Bulmer was able to take advantage of an FCC policy that allowed him to be granted the WZOO call sign on FM (as WZOO-FM) by obtaining the written permission from WZOO (AM) in Asheboro, North Carolina. Mr. Bulmer paid the licensee of WZOO (AM) $1,000 to grant him permission. Hence, "102 ZOO" was born. WZOO-FM was one of five construction permits granted to Bulmer in the late 1980s/early '90s. At that time, prior to FCC auctions for frequencies, Bulmer discovered a not-widely-known FCC policy whereby if a filing window closed and there were no applications filed, the FCC would then grant a construction permit (authority to build the radio station) under "First Come/First Served" processing rules. While the general public was often stampeding to the next newly opened filing window, Bulmer was combing the FCC's records for windows that had just closed to ascertain what FCC filing windows drew no applications for a particular community.

As a result, Mr. Bulmer received construction permits to construct new FM stations in Edgewood, Ohio (Ashtabula, Ohio, WZOO-FM), North Baltimore, Ohio (WHMQ FM, Findlay, Ohio, now WPFX), Royal Center, Indiana (WHZR (FM) "Hoosier 103" in Logansport, Indiana) and WJBI-FM in Windslow (Augusta-Waterville, Maine). Bulmer constructed three of those four stations (he gave the WJBI-FM permit back to the FCC, as the economy had hit the skids in the early 1990s) and built an entire group of new FM stations from construction permits. Arguably, 102 ZOO was Bulmer's most successful station in the group. Having constructed the station in late 1988 for approximately $140,000, he sold the station to Richard and David Rowley of Ashtabula in May 1999. Bulmer recently sold his last stations, WDOE (AM) and WBKX (FM) ("96 Kix FM") in Dunkirk-Fredonia, New York and he is now retired, spending time between homes in Pennsylvania and Florida.

The station was most commonly known under the nickname "102 ZOO" right after going on the air in 1989 right up until October 2007. It has, however, changed its slogan several times from originally being "The Exciting FM" in 1989 and into the early 1990s when it operated under a Top 40 format.

Then, in the mid 90s, 102 ZOO changed format to become a Hot AC (Adult Contemporary) station. It also changed its slogan to "No Rap, No Metal, No Way". In the early 2000s, when the station was sold by local owners, brothers Richard & David Rowley to Clear Channel (now iHeartMedia), 102 ZOO changed its slogan again to "Your Hit Music Station". The station remained Hot AC until flipping back to a Top 40 (CHR) format in September 2006. Then, in October 2007, Media One Group Switched 102 ZOO to an oldies format on October 5, 2007.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ "WZOO Goes Oldies". AllAccess.com.
  2. ^ "Making Moves: Morning Edition". Radio-Info.com. October 29, 2007. Archived from the original on March 22, 2012. Retrieved July 11, 2010.

41°49′44″N 80°49′26″W / 41.829°N 80.824°W / 41.829; -80.824