City | Sheboygan, Wisconsin |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Sheboygan County |
Branding | Sheboygan's Country, B-93.7 |
Slogan | "Your 12 in a row station" |
Frequency | 93.7 (MHz) |
First air date |
1993 (as WWJR's second frequency), 1997 as WBFM |
Format | Country music |
ERP | 6,000 watts |
HAAT | 77 meters |
Class | A |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°43′14″N 87°44′4″W / 43.72056°N 87.73444°W |
Callsign meaning | B-93 FM |
Former callsigns | WWJR (1993–1997) |
Owner | Duey E. Wright (Midwest Communications, Inc.) |
Sister stations | WHBL, WHBZ, WXER |
Website | b93radio.com |
WBFM is a country music station licensed to Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The station broadcasts at 93.7 MHz, on the FM dial. WBFM-FM is owned and operated by Midwest Communications under the sub-branding of Sheboygan Radio Group, which owns seven radio stations in Northeast Wisconsin and three other radio stations in the Sheboygan market. It shares studios with WHBL, WXER, and WHBZ on Washington Avenue in Sheboygan, with the station's transmitter and antenna based behind the studios.
The station was created as the second iteration of heritage station WHBL's FM sister WWJR in 1993 as part of a large frequency swap in northeastern Wisconsin that also involved WKTT moving from 103.1 to 98.1, and WWJR from 97.7 to the new 93.7 frequency to facilitate the creation of Kaukauna-licensed WOGB on 103.1. For the first four years of 93.7's history as WWJR, it carried a basic adult contemporary format.
In early 1997, the Walton family, the longtime owners of WHBL and WWJR acquired the license for a new station licensed to Sheboygan Falls at 106.5, which would transmit, like WHBL and WWJR, from their Washington Avenue three-tower array site on Sheboygan's south side. The Waltons determined that Sheboygan County was underserved by the lack of a locally based country music station, and at that time country listenership in the area was mainly split several ways in all areas of the county among WKTT and WCUB to the north from Manitowoc County, and West Bend's WBWI-FM and WMIL-FM from Waukesha-Milwaukee to the south.
On April 7, 1997, another frequency swap took place with the launch of 106.5. WWJR's format and calls were moved to 106.5, with 93.7 becoming a new radio country station, "B-93", taking the calls WBFM and mainly airing live programming during the day and voicetracked programming in the overnight hours. WWJR would switch to an active rock format at the end of 2000 as "The Buzz" under the calls WHBZ, while WKTT would end up converting to adult contemporary as WLKN in 2003 as WBFM's stronger signal in Manitowoc reduced the ratings for WKTT after their launch and to fill the AC hole left by WWJR's demise.