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WNRG-FM

WNRG-FM
WNRG-FM Logo.png
City Brookfield, Wisconsin
Broadcast area Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Branding Energy 106.9
Slogan Move To It!
Frequency 106.9 MHz (also on HD Radio)
First air date August 1995 (as WFMI)
Format Rhythmic Contemporary
ERP 4,400 watts
HAAT 116 meters
Class A
Facility ID 67484
Callsign meaning ENeRGy
Former callsigns WLJU (2/1993 – 6/1995, CP)
WFMI (6/1995 – 5/1997)
WXPT (5/1997 – 11/1997)
WPNT (11/1997 – 4/1999)
WMJO (4/1999 – 6/1999)
WJMR (6/1999 – 12/2000)
WFMR (12/2000 – 6/2007)
WJZX (6/2007 – 5/2010)
WNQW (5/2010 – 6/2010)
WZBK-FM (6/2010-9/2012)
Owner Saga Communications
(Saga Communications of Milwaukee, LLC)
Sister stations WHQG, WJMR-FM, WJYI, WKLH
Webcast Listen Live
Listen Live - HD2
Website energy1069.com

WNRG-FM (106.9 FM) - branded as Energy 106.9 - is a rhythmic contemporary radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, licensed to the suburb of Brookfield. The station, which is owned by Saga Communications, is branded as "Energy 106.9". Its studios (which are shared with the other four sister stations) and transmitter are located in Milwaukee's West Side.

The 106.9 frequency came into being in Milwaukee when it was licensed as WLJU on February 10, 1993. The new station was owned by Harris Classical Broadcasting, which also owned Milwaukee's heritage Classical station, WFMR. It formally signed on for the first time in August 1995 as WFMI, playing a satellite-fed smooth jazz format. A more powerful and resourceful station, WJZI (93.3) converted from a failing rock format as WQFM to smooth jazz in 1996, giving WFMI stiff competition.

Both stations were sold to Saga Communications, and WFMI was quickly switched to a Modern AC format, becoming WXPT on May 9, 1997, branded as "106.9 The Point" (the first song on "The Point" was Sheryl Crow's "A Change Would Do You Good"). When Chicago's WPNT-FM changed formats a few months later, 106.9 picked up the WPNT call sign. They had modest success for a small station, but a few of the bigger stations in the market took notice and adjusted their playlists to fight off the young suburban upstart.

The station is also hamstrung by a traditionally weak signal which has never covered the important suburban markets like the Waukesha and Ozaukee County suburbs very well, and is virtually non-existent north of the Sheboygan County line, where it runs into adjacent-channel interference from WHBZ on 106.5. This is because the frequency was a short-spacing allocation which is shared with WOOD-FM across Lake Michigan in Muskegon, Michigan, which is at a very strong 50,000 watts compared to this station's weaker power, and it does have conflicting interference with that station on the northern rim of their coverage area.


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Wikipedia

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