WEHM

WEHM & WEHN
City Manorville, New York
Broadcast area eastern Long Island, southeast Connecticut, southwest Rhode Island
Branding 92-9 and 96-9 'EHM
Slogan Progressive Radio for Long Island
Frequency See § Stations
Format Adult Album Alternative
Owner Lauren and Roger Stone
(LRS Radio, LLC)
Sister stations WBAZ, WBEA
Webcast Listen Live
Listen Live (via TuneIn)
Website www.wehm.com

WEHM (92.9 FM) is an Adult album alternative formatted radio station that is licensed to Manorville, New York and serving eastern Long Island. Its transmitter is located in Manorville. WEHM's programming is simulcast on WEHN (96.9 FM) East Hampton, New York, the station which originally had been home to WEHM when it was located on 96.7 FM. WEHN's signal covers the easternmost parts of Long Island as well as a rimshot signal into the New London-Groton, Connecticut and Westerly, Rhode Island areas.

The stations were purchased in 2013 for $3.2 million and licensed to LRS Radio, LLC, which is owned by WEHM on-air talent Lauren Stone (68.8%) and her father Roger W. Stone (31.2%), the Chairman/CEO of Kapstone Paper & Packaging Company in Northbrook, Illinois,[1]. Both stations broadcast from studios in Water Mill, New York alongside sister stations WBAZ and WBEA.

History

Amagansett studios

WEHM signed on in 1993 at 96.7 MHz licensed in East Hampton to East Hampton Broadcasting. Its ownership was made up of majority owners Leonard Ackerman, a local attorney, and then Sony America Chairman Mickey Shulhof with minority interest held by such notables as Billy Joel, Christie Brinkley and others. The station would sign on with an Adult Contemporary format and changing to a AAA format which proved very successful.

In 2000, then-owner AAA Entertainment obtained a construction permit for a new FM station at 92.9 MHz licensed to Southampton. After several years of planning and development, the 92.9 frequency would sign on in June 2003 and would become WEHM's permanent home that July.[2] At that time, the 96.7 frequency took the WHBE calls[3] and took on a Bloomberg Radio format (a move reportedly done by the influence of Michael Bloomberg).

The two WEHMs would be united in April 2006 when WHBE quietly moved up the dial from 96.7 to 96.9 MHz and began to simulcast WEHM's programming. WHBE changed their call letters to WEHN.

On June 24, 2008, the FCC approved a change in WEHM's community of license from Southampton, NY to Manorville, NY.

Stations

Call sign Frequency City of license Facility ID ERP
W
Height
m (ft)
Class Transmitter coordinates First air date Call sign meaning Former call signs
WEHM92.9 FMManorville, New York520593,100141 m (463 ft)A40°51′18″N 72°46′11″W / 40.85500°N 72.76972°W / 40.85500; -72.76972 (WEHM)Coordinates: 40°51′18″N 72°46′11″W / 40.85500°N 72.76972°W / 40.85500; -72.76972 (WEHM)2003 (as 92.9 WEHM)W East HaMptonWCSO (2001-2003)
WWHL (2003)
WHBE (2003)[2]
WEHN96.9 FMEast Hampton, New York182184,300472.3 m (1,550 ft)A40°59′37″N 72°10′19″W / 40.99361°N 72.17194°W / 40.99361; -72.17194 (WEHN)1993 (as 96.7 WEHM)W East HamptoNWVEH (1990-1991)
WQEH (1991-1992)
WEHM (1992-2003)
WHBE (2003-2006)[3]

References

  1. "LRS Radio Acquires Long Island Cluster". Radio Insight. Retrieved October 13, 2017.
  2. 1 2 "WEHM Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
  3. 1 2 "WEHN Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
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