City | Carlisle, Pennsylvania |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |
Branding | Red 102.3 |
Slogan | "#1 for New Country and the Legends" |
Frequency | 102.3 MHz |
First air date | 1959 |
Format | Country |
ERP | 3,000 watts horiz 2,750 watts vert |
HAAT | 100 meters |
Class | A |
Facility ID | 74557 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°17′24″N 77°08′10″W / 40.290°N 77.136°WCoordinates: 40°17′24″N 77°08′10″W / 40.290°N 77.136°W |
Former callsigns | WHYL-FM (1959–1979) WZUE (1979–1981) WHYL-FM (1981–2002) WRKZ-FM (2002–2004) |
Owner | Harold Z. Swidler (Radio Carlisle, Inc.) |
Sister stations | WIOO, WHYL |
Webcast |
LISTEN LIVE Listen Live streaming URL |
Website | red1023.com |
WCAT-FM is Red 102.3, a 3,000-watt country music radio station in Carlisle, Pennsylvania serving Carlisle and the surrounding communities.
Current air personalities include:
Weekend programming includes:
The frequency began as WHYL-FM airing a simulcast of WHYL, an AM station housed in the same building. On December 31, 1979, the call sign changed to WZUE and was branded as "Zoo 102". The WZUE calls were short-lived as the call sign reverted to WHYL-FM on October 14, 1981, branded as "Country 102." On April 26, 2002, the call sign was changed to WRKZ-FM (which is now a station in Columbus, Ohio). It began as a simulcast of WCAT-FM, which belonged to a different frequency in the same market, and branded itself as "Cat Country 106.7". After a brief period, WRKZ-FM flipped formats to all-'80s rock and re-branded itself as "Z102.3." Another format change came shortly thereafter when "Cat Country 106.7" WCAT-FM, on 106.7, changed its call sign to WCPP (known as "Cool Pop") and changed its format to Hot AC. On February 17, 2004 the WCAT-FM call sign was then moved to 102.3, the format was again changed to country, and it became the currently branded Red 102.3.
Citadel Broadcasting, the station's former owner, merged with Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011. To comply with Department of Justice regulations, WCAT-FM, the license for WWKL, and the intellectual property of WTPA, along with WRSR in Flint, Michigan, were transferred to Potential Broadcasting LLC. In August 2012, Potential Broadcasting sold WCAT to Harold Z. Swidler, owner of WIOO in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The sale was consummated on November 7, 2012. Upon sale consummation in 2012 the studio facilities were relocated from Camp Hill, Pennsylvania (at the former home of Citadel Harrisburg) to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where it continues to provide the primarily music-driven, "New Country & The Legends" format today, with a large emphasis on the local community (as reflected on the official website, boasting "Community-Minded Local Radio. Local Personalities. Local Owners.").