WDET-FM (101.9 MHz) is a public radio station in Detroit, Michigan. It is owned by Wayne State University with its studios and transmitter in the Cass Corridor neighborhood.[2] WDET broadcasts shows from National Public Radio, Public Radio International and American Public Media. The station is the primary provider of news involving the American automotive industry.[3] and the Michigan Association of Broadcasters (MAB) named WDET the 2021 and 2022 Public Radio Station of the Year.
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Broadcast area | Metro Detroit |
Frequency | 101.9 MHz (HD Radio) |
Branding | 101.9 WDET |
Programming | |
Format | Public radio News and Talk |
Affiliations | National Public Radio Public Radio Exchange American Public Media |
Ownership | |
Owner | Wayne State University |
History | |
First air date | December 18, 1948 |
Call sign meaning | Detroit |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 71189 |
Class | B |
ERP | 48,000 watts |
HAAT | 169 meters (554 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 42°21′6″N 83°03′48″W / 42.35167°N 83.06333°W |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen live player |
Website | wdet.org |
WDET-FM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 48,000 watts. It is licensed to broadcast using HD Radio technology.[4] WDET-FM's signal covers much of Southeast Michigan and part of Southwestern Ontario.
Programming
editOn weekdays, WDET-FM airs news and talk programming, mostly national shows with local news cut-ins: Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Fresh Air, On Point and Marketplace. It also produces two weekday one-hour talk programs, Created Equal with Stephen Henderson and The Metro with Nick Austin and Tia Graham. There are five hours of local music programming each day.
On weekends, a mix of talk shows and music programs are heard. Talk shows include Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!, Radio Lab, On The Media, and Latino USA. Music programs include Acoustic Café, Ann Delisi's Essential Music, Rob Reinhart's Essential Music, Soul Saturday, This Island Earth with Ismael Ahmed, The Progressive Underground with Chris Campbell, Destination Jazz with Ed Love and Jay's Place with Jay Butler. (Butler was a longtime air personality on WQBH and WJLB.)
The Detroit Radio Information Service (DRIS) broadcasts on a subcarrier of WDET. DRIS serves the visually impaired community with live and pre-recorded readings of daily and weekly print publications via special radio receiver or streaming. There are plans to launch an HD-2 subchannel which would play eclectic music and some news programs.
History
editUnited Auto Workers
editWDET-FM was dedicated on December 18, 1948[5] The first air date was Feb. 13, 1949. It was originally owned by the United Auto Workers Union. It mostly broadcast public service programs under station manager Ben Hoberman. The studios were on Capital Street near Rouge Park. The station was not financially viable and the UAW-CIO sought to sell it.[6]
.Detroit Public Radio
editWhat was then Wayne University (it joined the state university system in 1956) bought the station for one dollar in 1952 and converted it to non-commercial status. The irregular programming schedule included mainly classical music and faculty lectures. In May 1960, WDET began broadcasting from the 15th floor of the Maccabees Building near the Wayne State University campus.[7] Their new studio had previously been used by WXYZ radio. The cramped space, named Back Alley Studios,[8] was too small to house the management staff. They worked from an old house on campus. John Buckstaff, who became general manager in 1968, developed the station's format until he resigned in 1981. Jazz, modern music, and volunteer-produced programming were added.[9] In the early 1970s, WDET-FM began adding shows from the new public radio network, NPR, including All Things Considered and Morning Edition. There were volunteer-produced talk programs geared to a specific audience, such as Gayly Speaking and Indian to Indian.[10] Judy Adams, who would be a music host and program director until 2005, was hired in 1974.
The conflict of programming time for niche audiences or a wider audience would be a theme for many years.[11] Station management and volunteer producers often clashed, and the station struggled financially.[12] Buckstaff said that the station's strength was its variety, and that "you're bound to run into something you don't like."[13] In 1972, the station held a press conference to announce that they needed $65,000 (about $490,000 in 2024 dollars) to avoid going off the air. [14] As of 1975, however, it was the seventh most-listened to public radio station in the country and had a record-setting pledge drive. [15]
In May 1982, Marvin Granger became general manager. Much of the volunteer-made programming did not have a professional sound, he felt, and he cancelled many of these programs and oriented the station to a general audience. Many felt that this changing of the station's identity left some groups without a voice, but Granger stated that programs with small audiences were not financially viable.[16] Granger resigned in December 1983 and news director Caryn Mathes became general manager. She would lead the station until February 2005.
The listening audience greatly expanded in the 1980s, along with revenue. In 1983, Ed Love, Ann Delisi, Martin Bandyke and Ralph Valdez were hired as music hosts. Jazz programs were aired during the week, with folk, blues and classical on the weekends. There were several other music shows in a variety of genres. Other music hosts from the 1980s included Nkenge Zola, Famous Coachman, and Dave Dixon.
The broadcast facilities in the Maccabees Building were considered "unhealthy and dangerous"[17] and the station began planning improvements. On November 29 1985, the studio was damaged by an electrical fire and thousands of records were destroyed. The studio was cleaned and repaired, and the station was off the air for less than a day.[18] A new studio was custom-built on the first floor of 6001 Cass Ave and it became WDET's home in September 1987.[19]
WDET's antenna remained attached to the tower atop the Maccabees Building, which was then owned by Detroit Public Schools Community District. When the antenna began to fail, the university claimed that the tower's condition was too poor to hang a new antenna on.[20] The dispute over who would pay to repair the tower was ultimately resolved when WDET chose to build its own tower. In 1995, WDET began using its new tower on Canfield Street, as well as studios in the new University Towers building.
Increasing local content
editIn 2004, WDET-FM implemented extensive programming changes. The station dropped many NPR programs such as Fresh Air and Car Talk, as well as some popular local music shows such as Folks Like Us and Arkansas Traveler. This was done to promote more locally produced music programming. However, it was followed by a decline in listener pledges.
In the fall of 2005, new general manager Michael Coleman (replacing Caryn Mathes, who departed for WAMU in Washington, D.C.) made changes to WDET's schedule again, dropping many of the weekday music programs in favor of a more news-oriented format. He brought back all of the previously dropped programming and added new NPR-produced programs. Particularly controversial was the dismissal of long-time midday host Martin Bandyke. Local media outlets reported he may have violated conflict of interest rules by accepting gifts from record companies. Bandyke later hosted morning drive time at Adult Alternative-formatted WQKL 107.1 FM in Ann Arbor.
Controversy over changes
editAs a result of the 2005 format change, some listeners filed a class action lawsuit against the station for fraudulently taking donations for programming that was planned on being discontinued. Disgruntled former listeners also held two protests. The first occurred in front of WDET's offices a few days after Christmas. The second occurred near Cobo Hall during the North American International Auto Show.
Organizers promised that the rally would draw 5,000 people, though less than one hundred showed up, and a plan to protest WDET's changes during the Super Bowl XL festivities also failed to occur.
On Thursday May 11, 2006, Michael Coleman announced another major shake-up at WDET. Six employees were laid off including long-time music host Jon Moshier. Several others were forced to accept pay cuts, demotions, or reductions in hours.
2007 Programming changes
editOn Monday April 2, 2007, WDET implemented several programming changes. The following programs were removed from the schedule: "Day to Day" (which was terminated by NPR, not WDET), "Front Row Center", "Live From Studio A", "The Best of the DSO", Liz Copeland's "Alternate Take", Chuck Horn's "Seventh Journey", "The Ralph Valdez program", Mick Collin's "Night Train", and "The W. Kim Heron Program". New additions included the locally produced "Detroit Today" as well as NPR programs "Talk of the Nation", "Marketplace", "Marketplace Money", "BBC World Service", "Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!", and "The Changing World". "Destination Jazz: The Ed Love Program" was reduced from five to three hours, and Michael Julien's "Global Mix" was reduced from five to two hours. Combined with previous changes, the station moved to a more news oriented format. WDET now has less local and indie music coverage, although the station continues to offer several musical genres on weekends.
On September 15, 2007, WDET added the show "Tell Me More" with Michel Martin from NPR News on weekdays at 1 pm, which replaced "World Have Your Say" from the BBC. "Deep River" with Robert Jones moved to Sunday afternoons, and "The Tavis Smiley Show" was added to the weekend line up, on Friday evenings and Sunday mornings.
2007 to present
editAnn Delisi, who had resigned in March 1995, [21] returned to WDET as a music host in February 2009. J Mikel Ellcessor, general manager for four years, resigned in 2013. Craig Fahle and Michelle Sbinovich shared the general manager duties, with Sbinovich assuming sole leadership in 2014. Detroit Free Press editorialist Stephen Henderson began hosting the station's daily talk show in March 2015.
Present general manager Mary Zatina assumed leadership on January 2 2020. She, with program director Adam Fox, added several hours of local music and talk to the schedule as of February 5 2024.[22]
Broadcast transmitter
editWDET transmits from a tower at 554 feet (169 meters) in height above average terrain (HAAT) near the intersection of Cass Avenue and Canfield Street near the Wayne State University campus. WDET broadcasts with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 48,000 watts, so it is grandfathered at slightly more power than would be permitted today in the Detroit area, for its HAAT. According to the FCC, the same antenna height setup if being newly licensed today would only be allotted 39,000 watts.[23]
A failed air conditioner damaged the transmitter during the summer of 2020. The backup transmitter had poor sound quality and a fundraising campaign was begun to replace the equipment. The Kresge Foundation helped fund the new transmitter (a Nautel GV30N) which went on the air in October 2021.[24]
References
edit- ^ "Facility Technical Data for WDET-FM". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
- ^ Radio-Locator.com/WDET
- ^ "WDET-FM 101.9, Detroit". www.michiguide.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2000.
- ^ "Station Search Details".
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 172, Broadcasting & Cable
- ^ "WDET-FM to suspend operations". The Detroit Free Press. March 27, 1952. p. 4.
- ^ "FM Highlights". Detroit Free Press. May 16, 1960. p. 8TV.
- ^ Gonzalez, John D. (September 19, 1987). "Voice from past helps to revive radio drama". Detroit Free Press. p. 15A.
- ^ Angelo, Frank (May 23, 1973). "Here's how you can help yourself". Detroit Free Press. p. 7A.
- ^ "WDET-FM Oct 1976 Program Guide".
- ^ Zurawik, Dave (October 21, 1979). "Private groups vs. WDET: Who's serving who what?". Detroit Free Press. p. A3.
- ^ Heron, W. Kim (October 4, 1980). "Radio host protests show cancellation". Detroit Free Press. p. 7D.
- ^ Angelo, Frank (May 23, 1973). "Here's how you can help yourself". Detroit Free Press. p. 7A.
- ^ Mackay, Roberta (March 21, 1972). "WDET faces money crisis". Detroit Free Press. p. 8c.
- ^ "WDET Campaign raises $36,000". Detroit Free Press. November 15, 1975. p. 11A.
- ^ Heron, W. Kim (December 26, 1983). "New WDET pilots to keep same course". The Detroit Free Press. p. 6D.
- ^ "WDET-FM: A Status Report: Fiscal 1983-84" (PDF).
- ^ McGraw, Bill (December 2, 1985). "WDET counts losses after fire hits station". The Detroit Free Press. p. A3.
- ^ "WDET-FM: Annual Report October 1 1986-September 30 1987" (PDF).
- ^ Betzold, Michael (March 15, 1990). "Dispute jams chance to boost public FM". Detroit Free Press. p. B1.
- ^ Johnson, L.A. (March 29, 1995). "Radio Delisi". Detroit Free Press. p. 1F.
- ^ Hinds, Julie (January 23, 2004). "Detroit public radio station WDET-FM marks 75th anniversary with major local programming news". Detroit Free Press.
- ^ "FMpower - Find ERP for an FM Station Class | Federal Communications Commission". www.fcc.gov. Retrieved February 21, 2024.
- ^ Rubin, Neal (October 19, 2021). "WDET's new transmitter goes live. So long, static on Detroit public radio". The Detroit Free Press.
External links
edit- Facility details for Facility ID 71189 (WDET-FM) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- WDET-FM in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
- WDET Program Guides and Reports at the Walter P. Reuther Library spanning 1951–2002.