The NBC years NBC, which had an
owned-and-operated station in Chicago since 1931 with
WMAQ (), signed on WMAQ-FM on October 13, 1948, from studios in the
Merchandise Mart. The station began airing a classical music format afternoons and evenings in 1966, though it continued to simulcast WMAQ during mornings and early afternoons. By the early 1970s, it had adopted an
easy listening format. In 1970, the station's transmitter was moved to the
John Hancock Center. In 1974, the station's call letters were changed to WJOI. WJOI followed suit, and aired an automated country music format aimed at a somewhat younger audience than WMAQ, with programming from TM Productions. In January 1977, the station's call sign was changed to WKQX, and it adopted an
album-oriented rock format. The program director was
Bob Pittman, who later created
MTV and is now CEO of
iHeartMedia. resulting in four FM rock stations (WKQX,
WXRT,
WDAI, and WLUP) competing against each other. In 1978, WKQX began "sponsoring" the
Triad music magazine, which was formerly associated with
free-form Chicago radio station
WXFM. By January 1979, WDAI switched to an all-
disco format and WKQX became an
adult contemporary station; Joel Sebastian hosted mornings.
Q101 In the early 1980s, WKQX began to be branded "Q-101". By the mid-1980s, the station had evolved into a
hot AC format. During this period, the station carried
Sexually Speaking with Dr.
Ruth Westheimer and the
Rick Dees Weekly Top 40. From 1983 to 1993, Robert Murphy was the morning drive host on Q101.
Tommy Edwards joined the station as program director in 1986. Starting in 1987, NBC began a two-year-long divestiture of their radio properties. In 1988,
Emmis Communications purchased WKQX, along with four other NBC radio stations, for $121.5 million. In the mid to late 1980s, WKQX aired an
adult top 40 format, with the slogan "Today's Music". Q101 continued to evolve, and on July 14, 1992, WKQX adopted an
alternative rock format as "Chicago's New Rock Alternative". Bill Gamble was the station's Program Director. In July 1993, former MTV
VJ Mark Goodman was hired as morning host, replacing Robert Murphy, but he remained in this position less than a year. In July 1998, Q101 became the new home of
Mancow Muller's morning show after he left
WRCX the previous month. Specialty shows on the station, like
Local 101, showcased promising local acts, many of whom went on to achieve greater prominence. On April 1, 2005, WKQX went "on shuffle", with its playlist expanded from 200 to approximately 1,000 songs. Instead of focusing solely on new music, they expanded their playlist to include classic alternative rock from the 1980s and 1990s, and some 1970s artists. On September 18, 2006, Q101 launched
The Morning Fix, a morning show led by former
WXDX-FM Pittsburgh personality
Alan Cox, and presented in a manner similar to
The Daily Show, featuring a blend of current events and pop culture. However, on November 9, 2007,
The Morning Fix underwent major changes when it was decided that morning airtime would be more wisely used playing music; the changes resulted in only 2 of the shows' original 6 members remaining, Alan Cox and Jim "Jesus" Lynam. On August 1, 2008, Cox and Lynam were let go, with management moving Brian Sherman and Steve Tingle from afternoons to the morning slot. During its tenure as an alternative rock station, WKQX served as host to several music festivals and events, mainly Jamboree at
Tweeter Center in
Tinley Park every June, and Twisted (formerly Twisted Christmas) at various venues every December.
Purchase by Merlin Media On June 21, 2011, Emmis announced that it would sell WKQX, sister station
WLUP-FM, and
WRXP-FM in New York City to Merlin Media, whose CEO was former
Tribune Company and
Clear Channel Communications executive
Randy Michaels. Emmis, who retained a minority stake in Merlin Media, granted Merlin a
local marketing agreement to operate WKQX and WLUP-FM from July 15 until the sale officially closed on September 1. A format flip for WKQX, from alternative rock to
all-news, was rumored after the sale was announced. Michaels was on record as saying, "My favorite format has always been spoken radio... it's time for spoken word to move to FM." That same day, Emmis sold off the "Q101" name, related intellectual properties, and the Q101.com web domain, to Broadcast Barter Radio Networks. Q101's final on-air staffed show, "Local 101", concluded at approximately 1:01 a.m. on July 15; the program ended with "
Tonight, Tonight" by Chicago-based
The Smashing Pumpkins,
The Cure's "
Friday I'm in Love" (the first song played at Q101's 1992 inception as an alternative station), and formal goodbyes by Chris Payne, Pogo, and other Q101 staffers. Q101 would continue solely as an online stream programmed, in part, by Emmis'
KROX-FM, before BBRN eventually relaunched it as
an internet-only station. WKQX began
stunting with adult contemporary music along with news reports as "FM New". Robert Murphy returned to the station after 19 years to host mornings along with Lise Dominique for a few weeks until the full format switch took place.
FM News 101.1 On July 21, 2011, WKQX changed its call letters to WWWN, a
call sign moved from a
silent signal in
Watseka, Illinois licensed to Randy Michaels' Radioactive LLC. At the outset, "FM News 101.1" sought to differentiate itself from WBBM by highlighting its round-the-clock newswheel (as opposed to
Chicago Bears flagship WBBM), aiming for a looser, less formal news presentation with a conversational tone, and deviating from hard news in favor of lifestyle, health and entertainment features. The initial on-air and newsroom staff at "FM News 101.1" included several with Chicago radio ties, including Debra Dale and Jennifer O'Neill (both
WBBM alumna),
Brant Miller and Monica DeSantis (
WLS alums), and Ed Curran and Rob Hart (
WGN alums). Moreover, Merlin's top management (including Michaels) admitted that the format for both stations were still a work in progress, and "FM News" underwent a continual series of format adjustments. These included: the addition of sports and business updates; the "informal" testing of a news partnership with
WMAQ-TV; and the addition of daily commentary segments from
Clark Howard and
Lionel. Later staff changes and reassignments at the station would lead to an increased reliance on "shared anchor arrangements" with its New York counterpart WEMP, as well as a non-linear,
voicetracking-style of arranging reports, sometimes without any anchor transitions. By June 2012, WIQI began phasing in blocks of "Expanded News Coverage" where the station entered a programming approach similar to
talk radio. Personalities such as
Mancow Muller,
Neil Steinberg,
Kevin Matthews,
Mike North and
Dan Jiggets and former
WGN morning host
Greg Jarrett all hosted informal auditions under the "Expanded News Coverage" banner. In spite of constant format tweaks and alterations, the all-news format failed to achieve better than a 0.4
Arbitron ratings share. WIQI flipped to a 1990s-centric
adult hits format targeted at females between the ages of 18 and 49, and was branded as "i101". After one month on the air, "i101" would move towards a
hot adult contemporary approach. "i101" included some limited use of on-air staff, including morning host and former
WLUP-FM staffer Jane Monzures, who shared morning duties with fellow "Loop" alum Pete McMurray between August and October 2012. In late 2013, the station shifted to a
rhythmic adult contemporary format.
101 WKQX . As the "Q101" name and intellectual property were used at the time by
an unrelated webcaster, the station branded under their call letters. On January 3, 2014, Merlin Media announced a
local marketing agreement (LMA) with
Cumulus Media that would see Cumulus take over operations of WIQI, WLUP and WKQX-LP. The deal, which includes an option for Cumulus to purchase WIQI and WLUP, resulted in Merlin relinquishing operations of its last remaining radio stations, and also saw an expansion of Cumulus' Chicago cluster, which includes
WLS and
WLS-FM. Cumulus executives indicated that they, at the time of rebranding, had no intentions of acquiring back
the online rendition of "Q101" and related intellectual properties from the stations' 1992-2011 era. "
Closing Time" by
Semisonic was the last song played on "i101", while the first song played on the 101.1/87.7 simulcast was "
Times Like These" by
Foo Fighters. The WKQX
call sign was restored on the 101.1 facility on January 17. In September 2015,
Portland radio personality Marconi joined WKQX to host weeknights (replacing PJ Kling). Marconi left WKQX in January 2018. Brian Sherman, former on-air personality at Q101 from 2001 to 2011, and one half of the duo Sherman and Tingle, was hired as an on-air personality for weekends. In November 2015, WKQX and WLUP announced their move from the Merchandise Mart, where the 101.1 frequency has been broadcast from since first taking the airwaves in 1948, in favor of a new studio at the
NBC Tower. Cumulus stated that under the agreement, which carries a monthly fee of $600,000, the company had lost $8.4 million on the two Merlin stations. The sale to Cumulus was consummated on June 15, 2018.
Returning to Q101 On April 18, 2022, Cumulus Media announced their purchase of
Q101 Chicago from Broadcast Barter Radio Networks, as well as the Q101.com domain name, all underlying trademarks and related intellectual property that Emmis had divested in 2011. Cumulus Chicago Vice President/Market Manager Marv Nyren revealed to
Daily Herald journalist Robert Feder that discussions had been ongoing for over four years to reacquire rights to the "Q101" brand. The internet station ceased operations, while WKQX reverted to "Q101" during the station's "10th anniversary" concert on May 3, 2022 (celebrating the launch of the current iteration of the format over the former WKQX-LP). ==References==