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WOMG is a country music station licensed to Lexington, South Carolina and serves the Columbia, South Carolina market. The Cumulus Media outlet is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to broadcast at 98.5 MHz with an ERP of 6 kW. The station goes by the name 98.5 Nash Icon. Its studios are located at the Granby Building in Cayce and the transmitter is in Columbia northeast of downtown. ==History== 98.5 was allocated in the early 1990s as part of an FCC docket that would allow the Columbia metro area several new radio stations. The license was eventually awarded to Lexington Communications, which applied for the WLXC call letters. Before construction started, Lexington Communications agreed to sell the station to HFS Communications, another group, on the condition that WLXC was operated by the company for a period of one year before completing the transaction.〔"Radio Station Doesn't Plan To Change Its Tune", ''The State'' newspaper, November 4, 1995〕 Studios for the station were constructed in the town of Lexington while the transmitting facilities were built near the village of Red Bank. WLXC was to be launched on August 26, 1994, but it was postponed due to area storm damage from the remnants of Tropical Storm Beryl (which produced several tornadoes in and near the town of Lexington) as well as problems with the station's phone lines.〔"WIS-TV Presented a 'You Are There' View Of Tornado", ''The State'', August 15, 1994.〕 Finally on August 31, WLXC signed on with a sports radio format known as "98.5 The Ticket".〔"Sports Station Finally On The Air", ''The State'', September 1, 1994.〕 Local airstaff for WLXC in its first year included station general manager/part-owner Jim Forrest and Tom Hayes for mornings, Gary Pozik for mid-mornings (with a health and fitness show, which was dropped months later), Ken Wall for early afternoons, Matt Hogue for late afternoons and Phil Kornblut for evenings (which was moved after several months of being pre-empted by games to All-News outlet WVOC II).〔"Fans Howls Of Protest Flip The Switch On For USC-Clemson", ''The State'' newspaper, November 18, 1995〕 National sports–talk programming, which included "The Fabulous Sports Babe", came from "American Radio Sports Network". Several months after WLXC signed on, "American Sports Radio" was sold to "One-On-One Sports Network". While the station gained the rights for several national and regional sporting events, it had struggled in landing sporting events from the area's two most-popular teams: the University of South Carolina and Clemson University, primarily because both teams were already locked up in the Columbia market on other stations.〔"All-Sports Radio Station Still Seeking Programming Hits", "The State" newspaper, September 30, 1995〕 At one point, WLXC came close to acquiring Clemson sporting rights when their radio network was sold to a different syndication group. Attempts by WLXC to acquire the rights were blocked when the area's then-Clemson affiliate, Oldies outlet WOMG, threatened the station with a lawsuit.〔"After Flirt with WLXC, Tigers To Stay On WOMG", "The State" newspaper, May 20, 1995〕 Arbitron ratings for WLXC were almost non-existent throughout the entire year, scoring as low as 0.3 at one point.〔"WLXC Sports Radio Beached", ''The State'', December 16, 1995.〕 In late 1995, after WLXC's transaction to HFS Communications was completed, the station was sold shortly afterwards for $1.4 million to Baker Broadcasting, headed up by Frank Baker, a former WOMG general manager and a partner in HFS Communications. Baker at the time was the owner of WWBZ in McClellanville and had also recently acquired WNCK in Port Royal. Both stations operated a Charleston-based syndicated Beach music format known as "The Breeze", which Baker partially owned. In December, after weeks of rumors, WLXC announced that the format would be changed to "The Breeze" as well.〔 Airstaff on "The Breeze" network included veteran brother duo Leo and Woody Windham for mornings (both have been fixtures for many years in the Columbia radio market as well as part-owners of the network), Tanya Roberts (a former WOMG air talent) for middays, Bob Boswell for afternoons, and Eddie Zomerfield for nights.〔"Breeze Puts On No Airs, Personality Drives Shag/Blues Powerhouse", "The State" newspaper, September 8, 1996〕 Also, in a strange twist of irony, WLXC was able to acquire Clemson football and baseball rights beginning in the fall of 1996 when an agreement was worked out with WOMG to divide the sports package between both stations.〔"Tigers Feel The Heat, Switch Homes In Midlands Area", ''The State'', June 22, 1996.〕 Despite these changes, WLXC failed to gain traction in the Columbia ratings over the next couple of years, although it had a small but loyal following. In late February 1999, Baker Broadcasting announced that WLXC was sold for $3.2 million to Bloomington Broadcasting Corp. a company that owned local stations WTCB, WOMG, and WISW.〔"Breeze To Change With Sale Of WLXC", ''The State'', February 26, 1999.〕 Immediately after the sale closed, WLXC ended "The Breeze" simulcast and took the station off the air following a Clemson men's basketball game on February 28. This move was in preparation for the studios to be relocated from Lexington to the Granby Building in Cayce, where Bloomington's other stations are located. On March 4, at 3 p.m., WLXC signed back on with its present Urban Adult Contemporary format under the "98.5 Kiss FM" handle.〔"'Breeze' Now Adult, Urban 'Kiss-FM' WLXC-FM Returns With New Format", "The State" newspaper, March 5, 1999〕 The station ran commercial-free in its first two weeks on the air using a mixture of local and Dallas-based ABC Radio Network "The Touch" Urban AC format air talent, including morning man Carlton Booth.〔"New R&B Station Promises Local Urban Flavor", ''The State'', March 19, 1999.〕 Several weeks later, Carlton Booth morning show was dropped for the syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show. With the addition of Joyner and local afternoon host Kevin Holiday, WLXC's ratings jumped to fourth place in its first book (Summer, 1999), one of the strongest debuts in Columbia radio history for a new station.〔"Rivals Challenge The Big DM, New Radio Stations Specialize In Reaching Segments Of African-American Community", ''The State'', September 9, 1999.〕 In 2005, WLXC achieved success when it went to #1 12+ in the summer Arbitron ratings with a 7.5 share, its highest to date.〔"Ratings Sealed With A Kiss", ''The State'', August 19, 2005.〕 However, ratings slipped to 11th place in the next book as WWDM reclaimed the top spot.〔"A Bigger 'Kiss' For 'The Big DM'", ''The State'', November 4, 2005.〕 On April 1, 2008, the WOMG-FM calls and the oldies format moved from 103.1 FM to 98.5 FM.〔Otis R. Taylor, Jr., "Radio Station Switcheroo," ''The State'', April 1, 2008.〕 The WLXC-FM calls and the Urban format moved to WOMG's old frequency of 103.1 MHz as "Magic 103.1." The switch happened at 10:00 AM. The Oldies format's positioner was changed from "Oldies 103" to "Magic 98.5." The Oldies format aired on 103.1 for 18 years. Since, it has evolved to more of a classic hits format as of 2012, playing primarily 1970s and early 1980s music, with occasional 1960s music. The station is owned by Cumulus Media, which acquired it as part of its merger with Citadel on September 16, 2011. On February 28, 2014 WOMG changed their format to country, branded as "Nash FM 98.5".〔(Nash FM Launches in Columbia, SC )〕 In March 2015 WOMG rebranded as "98.5 Nash Icon".〔(WOMG Moves From nash FM to Nash Icon )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「WOMG」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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