WRAS (FM)

WRAS

City Atlanta, Georgia
Broadcast area Atlanta metropolitan area
Branding Album 88
88.5 GPB Atlanta
Slogan Left on the dial, right on the music (Album 88)
Frequency 88.5 MHz
First air date January 18, 1971
Format Public Radio News and Talk (5 a.m. to 7 p.m.)
College radio (7 p.m. to 5 a.m.)
ERP 50,000 watts
HAAT 318 meters (1043 ft)
Class C1
Facility ID 23959
Transmitter coordinates 33°41′4.00″N 84°17′23.00″W / 33.6844444°N 84.2897222°W / 33.6844444; -84.2897222
Callsign meaning Radio at State (Georgia State University)[1]
Affiliations GPB (daytime only)
Owner Georgia State University
Webcast Album 88 24 hour feed
GPB Atlanta 24 hour feed
Website www.wras.org
www.gpb.org/atlanta

WRAS (88.5 MHz) is a public FM radio station in Atlanta, Georgia. It is licensed to Georgia State University and funded by the university's Student Activity Fee. Its schedule is split between public radio programming from Georgia Public Broadcasting (88.5 GPB Atlanta) airing from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. and college radio programming (Album 88) airing from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. The Album 88 and 88.5 GPB Atlanta formats are both available 24 hours a day on separate internet streams, and Album 88 is available full-time on WRAS's HD-2 subchannel.

The transmitter is off Interstate 20 on Old Flat Shoals Road SE in Atlanta. The Album 88 student studios and offices are on the campus of Georgia State University in downtown Atlanta, while the GPB studios are located in their headquarters in Midtown Atlanta.

Students at Georgia State host and produce all of the programs on Album 88 with the exception of Georgia State Panthers sporting events. While Georgia Public Radio is heard around the clock on several simulcast radio stations in Georgia, listeners in the Atlanta area only hear the daytime schedule on WRAS. Atlanta has a full time National Public Radio affiliate, 90.1 WABE, with its own news department and airing most of the same national programs, such as All Things Considered and Morning Edition.

History

On January 18, 1971, WRAS first signed on the air, at first powered at 19,500 watts.[2]

The callsign WRAS was not first on the list of preferred callsigns for the station. The callsign WGSU and a few others were already taken so WRAS was accepted, standing for Radio At State. The first image lines for WRAS were The Stereo Alternative and the Stereo Odyssey, although most listeners simply referred to the station as "rass." In 1982 the student General Manager changed the image line to Album 88 and lessened the use of the callsign after seeing Arbitron radio ratings diaries in which listeners regularly confused FM stations WRAS, WRFG and WREK, which were all nearby on the radio dial. Album 88 refers to the album-based rotation the format employs: stressing several cuts from each album rather than a single.

Album 88's first general manager was Richard Belcher, well known to Atlanta TV viewers for his investigative reporting, first on WAGA-TV 5, and later WSB-TV 2. Alumni of the station span the range of media, from executive positions at the major recording labels and cable networks to air talent at radio and TV stations across the country.

Album 88 has won numerous awards, frequently beating out commercial radio stations, from the former Atlanta weekly Creative Loafing, the monthly Atlanta magazine, and the former College Music Journal. And for a student station with no budget for promotion, the station was also unusually successful according to the Birch, Arbitron and more recently Nielsen ratings. While most student stations in the pre-internet era eschewed popularity, WRAS sought to play a wide variety of music while gaining the largest audience possible. The station's impact on record sales in Atlanta led to the inclusion of Album 88 as a reporting station to Billboard for a time in the 1980s. With the increasing number of stations on the FM dial in Atlanta since the 1990s, commercial stations have increasingly targeted segments of the traditional WRAS audience. Keeping true to its roots, Album 88 today airs a wider variety of music to reflect the much wider range of music genres and sub-genres which have developed in the post-internet era.

Album 88 has played a crucial role in "breaking" a wide range of artists including R.E.M., Deerhunter and Outkast. Several platinum and gold records hang in Album 88's studios and offices. According to Bob Geldof, he penned the Boomtown Rats hit song, "I Don't Like Mondays" in the Album 88 office after reading a telex report of the schoolyard shooting on which the song is based.

Album 88 has over 50 student volunteers who host many of the programs. Among the specialty shows on Album 88 are: The Georgia Music Show (dedicated exclusively to artists from Georgia), I Don't Care (punk), Soul Kitchen (funk, soul, disco and related), Crossroads (blues), Jet Lag (international psychedelia), New Theory (chillwave), Beatscape Lounge (ambient, electronica and nu jazz), Subterranean (drum and bass), Cowtipper's Delight (classic country and alternative country), Dot Dash (post-punk),[3] Mighty Aphrodite (female vocalists), We're Not Gonna Take It (heavy-metal music), Tower of Song (psyche, prog, freakbeat), a large variety of hip hop including the long-running shows Tha Message, Rhythm and Vibes (Atlanta's longest-running hip hop show) and Hush Hush (instrumental hip hop), One Step Beyond (ska, bluebeat & rocksteady) and many more.[4]

On March 14, 2008, an F-2 tornado struck Atlanta's downtown core and led to the evacuation of students and employees from parts of the Georgia State campus. Album 88 was forced to suspend broadcasting for nearly two days. (See 2008 Atlanta tornado)

GPB Programming

On May 6, 2014, Georgia State University announced that WRAS would turn over its daytime hours to a new Atlanta-only service from the radio division of Georgia Public Broadcasting, with news/talk programming between the hours of 5am to 7pm, leaving the remaining ten hours of the day for student airtime. Daytime programs would continue on Album 88, but accessible only via a new digital subchannel and streaming live on the station's website.

GPB paid $150,000 to GSU, while GSU communications-major students getting internships with GPB. GSU was promised a weekly Georgia music program on the GPB state network. The contract was drawn for a two-year period, but it automatically renews, and has a clause that could lead to the sharing or transfer of the license to GPB in the future. The student government (SGA) had allocated over $300,000 for the transmitter, before finding out that most of its usage would be for GPB instead of for GSU students.

Despite being in the works for months, the deal was kept secret until the day after final exams ended, as students were leaving campus for the summer or preparing for graduation, and the station's management was making its annual change. GSU and GPB officials claimed that the deal had only been finalized the day before. This made Album 88 staff and GSU students upset at the manner in which it was handled, with some claiming that the transaction may have been illegal.[5] Student anger manifested itself at a protest during GSU's spring commencement ceremony,[6] and a social media campaign with the tag #savewras,[7] A petition on change.org drew over 10,000 signatories.

The switch had the benefit of bringing more NPR news and talk programming to radio listeners in Atlanta. Until the fall of 2015, Atlanta's other NPR station, 90.1 WABE, had long aired classical music during the day outside of drive time. A number of NPR popular programs weren't heard in Atlanta until WABE launched an all-news stream on its third HD subcarrier. But with WABE's move to more informational programs in the daytime, many of GPB's programming on WRAS duplicates programming already airing on WABE.

This is the second acquisition that GPB has made of a student station from a state university. In 2004, WUWG was acquired from the University of West Georgia, its entire broadcast license transferred from UWG to GPB. During the 2000s, the Radio Communications Board of Georgia Tech declined similar overtures made by GPB to 91.1 WREK.

Album 88 supporters also raised concerns about the appearance of a conflict of interest of Douglass Covey, VP for Student Affairs at GSU. Until April 2014, he served on the board of Public Broadcasting Atlanta, the arm of the Atlanta Public Schools that oversees WABE and WPBA-TV, while at the same time GSU was negotiating the deal to bring GPB into competition for listener donations and corporate underwritings that are needed to support WABE.[8]

Reactions

As one of the most influential college radio stations in the nation, support for keeping the Album 88 format on WRAS full-time, with no outside programming, came in from across the country.[9] Efforts to save fulltime programming on Album 88 were organized. [10] Some called for a boycott of Georgia Public Broadcasting and its sponsors.[11] In late June, 55 stations in 25 states broadcast a live program in support of Album 88.

Album 88 alumni proposed the use of a low-power FM translator for GPB programming.[12][13] Another solution would have been the purchase of a different FM station in the Atlanta radio market. But those ideas were rejected.

References

  1. "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  2. Broadcasting Yearbook 1973 page B-47
  3. dot dash
  4. WRAS Programming -
  5. http://www.current.org/2014/05/students-opposing-wras-deal-get-new-support/
  6. http://wabe.org/post/graduating-gsu-seniors-hold-protest-commencement-wras
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20180131033117/http://savewras.com/
  8. http://clatl.com/freshloaf/archives/2014/05/23/gsu-vp-involved-in-gpb-deal-previously-served-on-wabe-board-denies-conflict-of-interest
  9. http://clatl.com/freshloaf/archives/2014/05/06/gpb-to-take-over-wras-daytime-programming-student-djs-blast-unexpected-move
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20180131033117/http://savewras.com/
  11. http://BoycottGPB.com
  12. http://radiotvtalk.blog.ajc.com/2014/06/26/wras-alumni-offer-alternative-proposal-to-current-gpbgsu-deal/
  13. http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/news/2014/06/25/album-88-alumni-releases-plan-to-keep-station.html
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