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WSKP (AM)

WSKP
KoolRadioGTGO.jpg
City Hope Valley, Rhode Island
Broadcast area Southern Rhode Island
New London, Connecticut
Branding Kool Radio
Slogan Good Times, Great Oldies
Frequency 1180 kHz
(also on HD Radio via WBMW-HD3)
Translator(s) W282CB (104.3, Hope Valley)
First air date October 5, 1985 (as WJJF)
Format Oldies
Language(s) English
Power 1,800 watts daytime
1,000 watts critical hours
Class D
Facility ID 3068
Transmitter coordinates 41°31′36″N 71°44′35″W / 41.52667°N 71.74306°W / 41.52667; -71.74306
Former callsigns WJJF (1985–2004)
WCNX (2004–2011)
WCRI (2011–2013)
WSKP (12/1/2013–12/24/2013)
WWRX (2013–2014)
Owner John Fuller
(Red Wolf Broadcasting Corporation)
Sister stations WNTY, WSPR, WBMW, WJJF, WWRX
Webcast Listen Live
Website www.koololdiesradio.net

WSKP (1180 AM; "Kool Radio") is a radio station licensed to serve Hope Valley, Rhode Island. The station is owned by John Fuller's Red Wolf Broadcasting Corporation. It airs an oldies format.

With Red Wolf Broadcasting acquiring Davidson Media’s New England properties, the company is combining two Oldies brands into one trimulcast. The merger of programming takes the “Kool” branding of 1180 WSKP Hope Valley, Rhode Island/106.5 WBMW-HD3 Pawcatuck, Connecticut, and the airstaff of 990 WXCT Southington, Hartford, Connecticut and 1490 WACM Springfield, Massachusetts. Northeast Radio Watch reports that the new “Kool Radio” is featuring WACM/WXCT’s Larry Kratka in mornings as previous morning host Fred King exits.

The station signed on October 5, 1985 as WJJF, a country music station. It was started by John J. Fuller, now owner of Red Wolf Broadcasting. The "JJF" in the call reflected Fuller's initials. WJJF's studio and transmitter were located on the Fuller Farm at 26 Woody Hill Road in Hope Valley. The transmitter still exists there.

Fuller sold WJJF to Charles River Broadcasting, owner of several classical music stations in New England (including WCRI on Block Island, WCRB in Boston, and WFCC-FM on Cape Cod), in 2002.Charles River Broadcasting continued the country music format (making it the company's second non-classical station, after classic rock-formatted WKPE-FM on Cape Cod until July 2004, when the call letters were changed to WCNX and the station temporarily left the air for tower replacement. Prior to being assigned in Rhode Island, the call letters were used by what is now WMRD in Middletown, Connecticut. WCNX returned that August with an all-news format provided by CNN Headline News; the Headline News simulcast was eventually phased out (as with most of the network's radio affiliates) in favor of talk shows.


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