WBBM-FM


WBBM-FM is a Top 40 radio station in Chicago. It is known on the air as B96 and it is owned by Entercom. The station has an effective radiated power of 3,300 watts, broadcasting from a transmitter atop the Willis Tower. The studios and offices are located at Two Prudential Plaza in the Loop. WBBM-FM's main competition is 103.5 WKSC-FM, owned by iHeartMedia.

History

Early years

The station began experimental broadcasts in November 1941, as W67C, broadcasting at 46.7 MHz. The station's transmitter was located atop the American National Bank Building, at 33 N. LaSalle Street. It simulcast co-owned WBBM AM 780, carrying its CBS Radio Network schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, game shows, soap operas and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio."
In 1943, the station's call sign was changed to WBBM-FM. In 1946, the station began broadcasting at 99.3 MHz. In 1947, the station's frequency was changed to 97.1 MHz, and in 1953 WBBM-FM moved to its current spot on the dial at 96.3 MHz. In the 1950s, as network programming moved from radio to television, WBBM-AM-FM carried a full service middle of the road format of popular music, news and talk. After 1964, most of the music was eliminated, in favor of talk and news.

The Young Sound

In 1966, WBBM-FM split from simulcasting the AM and flipped to "The Young Sound," a format pioneered by John DeWitt for co-owned WCBS-FM in New York City. Bud Kelly was the announcer for "The Young Sound" on WBBM-FM.
"The Young Sound" aired instrumental cover versions of recent hits, contemporary pop instrumentals from artists like Herb Alpert, and contemporary vocal hits from artists like Petula Clark. Every hour's playlist was designed so that each song would complement the titles that preceded and followed it. Initially, the station had a three to one instrumental to vocal ratio. However, its playlist was skewed towards a young audience, which distinguished it from most easy listening and beautiful music stations of the era.

Chicago's Favorite Rock

By the early 1970s, the station was airing a format consisting of top 40, album cuts, and past hits. The station was branded as "Stereo 96 WBBM-FM, Chicago's Favorite Rock!" Bob Johnston served as program director.
In 1971, the station's transmitter was moved to the John Hancock Center.

Mellow sound

By 1977, WBBM-FM and several other FM stations owned by CBS had adopted an adult contemporary format defined as the "mellow sound", playing contemporary music but without the harder-edged titles. During this era, the station was branded as "The Mellow Sound of Chicago" and "Soft Rock 96". Initially, all of CBS's "mellow sound" stations were automated.
Dick Bartley, who later became a popular syndicated radio personality, spent time at WBBM-FM as program director and morning disc jockey in the late '70s. WBBM-FM briefly carried American Top 40 with Casey Kasem during the soft rock years.

B96

In May 1982, WBBM-FM began airing a Top 40/CHR format known as "Hot Hits," which was created by consultant Mike Joseph. Concurrent with the format change was the phase out of all automation. Hot Hits was a high energy format, playing only current hits, and featured numerous jingles to reinforce the station's identity. The station was branded B96 the following year.
In 1986, WBBM-FM started to move toward a rhythmic top 40 direction, and in the late 1980s began to embrace dance product. In 1990, the station became known as "The Killer Bee: B96." In 1995, the station added more R&B and Hip hop music acts as the dance scene diminished.
In October 2008, the station's slogan was changed from "Chicago's Hits and Hip-Hop" to "Chicago's #1 Hit Music Station," as its format shifted back to mainstream Top 40.
Since 1992, the station has presented the B96 SummerBash concert.

Morning shows

B96's longtime morning program was the "Eddie & JoBo" morning zoo show. Joe Colborn first signed on at B96 in 1984 hosting evenings as "JoBo In Chicago." Ed Volkman started at B96 in 1986 hosting morning drive along with Karen Hand and Mike Elston. When Elston left B96 in 1988, Bohannon was moved to mornings along with Volkman and Hand, launching the "Eddie & JoBo" show. The morning show ran for two decades but was canceled on November 21, 2008.
On January 5, 2009, Julian Nieh and Jamar "J. Niice" McNeil started a new morning show, "J. Niice & Julian on the Radio." The two were previously together at iHeartMedia's WIHT in Washington, D.C. Nieh stayed with the show until December 2012. The show continued as "The J Show", with J. Niice as the host alongside Showbiz Shelly and Gabe. J. Niice left in March 2018 and in April, B96 debuted "DreX & Nina" with Gabe Ramirez still being kept on. DreX left B96 in February 2019 and the show became "Gabe and Nina in the Morning", hosted by Gabe Ramirez and Nina Hajian.

Ownership changes

had owned WBBM-FM since its beginnings. In 1995, CBS was acquired by Westinghouse. Infinity Broadcasting Corporation was acquired in December 1996, and shortly thereafter Westinghouse's name was changed to CBS Corp. Through its CBS Radio division, the CBS Corporation owned WBBM-FM for 76 years.
On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with Entercom, no longer a part of the CBS Corporation. The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on the 17th.

HD Radio

WBBM-FM broadcasts in the HD Radio format. The HD2 subchannel carries a national LGBTQ talk and EDM radio format called "Channel Q."
In January 2006, the station officially launched its HD2 FM subcarrier, airing a Dance Top 40 format as "B96 Dance". That format moved to a subchannel on co-owned 105.9 WCFS-FM in February 2019 and rebranded as "Energy." WBBM-FM's HD2 subchannel then switched to an Entercom format known as "Channel Q," a talk and EDM format, aimed at the LGBTQ community and heard in many radio markets served by Entercom FM stations.