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WPLJ-FM

WPLJ
PLJLOGOOctober2014.jpg
City New York, New York
Broadcast area New York City area
Branding New York's 95.5 PLJ
Slogan "New York's Best Music"
Frequency 95.5 MHz (also on HD Radio)
Translator(s) 94.3 W232AL (Pomona, relays HD2)
First air date May 4, 1948; 69 years ago (1948-05-04)
Format HD/FM1:
Commercial; Hot Adult Contemporary
HD2: Adult contemporary "WFAS"
HD3: WABC simulcast
ERP 6,700 watts
HAAT 408 meters
Class B
Facility ID 73887
Callsign meaning White Port & Lemon Juice
Former callsigns WJZ-FM (1948–1953)
WABC-FM (1953–1971)
WWPR (1987–1988)
Affiliations CBS Radio
Owner Cumulus Media
(Radio License Holdings LLC)
Sister stations WABC, WFAS, WNBM, WNSH
Webcast Listen Live
Website www.955plj.nyc

WPLJ (95.5 FM) is a radio station in New York City owned by the broadcasting division of Cumulus Media. WPLJ shares studio facilities with sister stations WABC (770 AM), WNSH (94.7 FM), and WNBM (103.9 FM) inside 2 Penn Plaza (above Pennsylvania Station) in midtown Manhattan, and its transmitter is atop the Empire State Building. The station airs a Hot Adult Contemporary music format, and is the home of the Todd & Jayde morning show. It is also the flagship station of the "Ralphie Tonight" program.

WPLJ broadcasts in the HD Radio format.

The station went on the air on May 4, 1948 under the call sign WJZ-FM, and in March 1953, the station's call letters were changed to WABC-FM following the merger of the American Broadcasting Company with United Paramount Theatres. As most FM stations did during the medium's formative years, 95.5 FM simulcasted the programming of its AM sister station.

In the early 1960s, however, WABC-FM began to program itself separately from WABC (AM). During the 1962–63 New York City newspaper strike, the station carried a news format for 17 hours daily. Two-and-a-half years before WINS launched its own around-the-clock, all-news format in April 1965, it was the first attempt at an all-news format in the New York market. This was followed by stints with Broadway show tunes and general freeform programming, including broadcasts of New York Mets baseball games. WABC's AM personalities, notably Dan Ingram, Chuck Leonard and Bob Lewis, hosted programs on the FM side which were the total opposites of the Top 40-powered sound for which they were better known on AM. WABC-FM did continue to simulcast its AM sister station during Herb Oscar Anderson's morning drive program.


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