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WRRC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WRRC
Broadcast areaTrenton, New Jersey
Frequency107.7MHz
Branding107.7 The Bronc
Programming
Formatfreeform
Ownership
Owner
WRRC2 (107.7 The Bronc Retro)
History
First air date
November 1, 1962 (as WRCR)
Former call signs
WRCR, WWRC
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6109
ClassD
ERP20watts
HAAT11 meters (36 feet)
Transmitter coordinates
40°16′44.00″N74°44′15.00″W/ 40.2788889°N 74.7375000°W/40.2788889; -74.7375000
Links
Public license information
Website1077thebronc

WRRC(107.7FM,107.7 The Bronc) is acollegeFMradio stationinLawrenceville, New Jersey,serving the students ofRider University.It is the broadcast outlet for Rider University Men's and Women's basketball, as well as Burlington County and Mercer County High School football and baseball.

The radio station[2]originally went on air November 1, 1962, as WRCR, and was located at 640 AM on the dial, broadcasting viacarrier current.A student, Ira Kinder, and the director of the college's audio/video department, Gordon Graves, founded the station.

In 1965, the station changed its call letters from WRCR to WWRC, because a commercial station on the East Coast wanted the WRCR call letters. In exchange, WWRC received equipment from the commercial station.

In 1966, WWRC was moved to the basement of the Hill Dormitory, housing the on-air studio, production studio, record library and two offices.

In 1971, WWRC moved to the Student Center building where the Communication Department first began to use the radio station for broadcasting classes. During this time the station operated as a commercial station, programming a news and popular rock format within the campus. In 1984, the station changed its call letters to WRRC, again because another radio station wanted theWWRCcall. At this time, the college station ceased broadcasting on carrier current and moved to the FM band at 88.5 MHz, sharing the frequency with student-run station WLSR, operated by the nearby Lawrenceville School.[3]

By the mid-1980s the station was finally able to offer 24-hour programming after WLSR moved from 88.5. However, to ensure student safety, the college opted to lock the Student Center at night, preventing further overnight programming. After just a few weeks of full-time operations, WRRC returned to a shortened broadcast schedule.

On November 24, 1993, the station moved to its current dial position, 107.7 FM. In 2007, through the use of automated programming, the station resumed 24-hour programming, expanding the air schedule to a full-time schedule.

In 2008, the station hired current general manager John Mozes. In 2019, 2021, and 2022, WRRC was nominated for Marconi Awards for College Radio Station of the Year, by the National Association of Broadcasters. In 2023 WRRC was awarded "Best College Radio Station Under 10,000 Students" by the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System.

WRRC currently broadcasts afreeformformat.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WRRC".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^"History – 107.7 the Bronc WRRC-FM".
  3. ^https:// lawrenceville.org/page/news-detail?pk=830157[dead link]
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