Top 40 WHTZ, went on the air at 6:08 AM on August 2, 1983
with program director/morning show host Scott Shannon. The station did not
begin calling itself "Z100" until a few days later
The first two songs ever played on the station were
"Eye of the Tiger" by Survivor, followed by "America" by Neil Diamond.
The station signed on from its new and still-incomplete
studio in Secaucus, transmitting from the old FM tower site near
Livingston,
New Jersey,
as their antenna was not moved to the top of the
Empire State
Building until later in
August. Moving the tower to midtown
Manhattan greatly
increased the coverage area of the station's signal.
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R&R's top 25 CHR Hits for 1983 |
Z100 was actually the second station that summer to attempt
to bring the Top 40 format back to
New
York, with rock station WPLJ having begun the
evolution to top 40 in June.
WHTZ was programmed to remind listeners of one-time AM
powerhouse WABC, which had gone from a tight Top 40 format to leaning Disco in
early 1979 to leaning adult rock later in 1979, to leaning adult contemporary
in 1980 and then evolving to Adult Contemporary/Talk in 1981, before it finally
flipped to an all-talk format on May 10, 1982.
Within 74 days of signing on, WHTZ had climbed from last
place to first in the New York Arbitron ratings book.
FLASHBACK: Here's Quick blitz teaser of the 4 hour 20 minute history of the first 10 years of Z-100 plus their 15th on-air reunion anniversary. Get it at
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Over the years, Z100 stayed with a top 40 format, with WPLJ
behind them in the ratings. Scott Shannon left Z100 at the end of 1988 to begin
"Pirate Radio" in Los
Angeles, and Steve Kingston took over as operations
manager and Frankie Blue would become assistant programming director.
By 1991, however, the Top 40 format was in an identity
crisis.
A major sign of this
crisis came when WPLJ moved to a hot adult contemporary format by 1992. Z100
responded to this by adding some older songs and introducing an evening talk
show called "Love Phones." Ratings gradually dropped from 1991 to
1993.
In 1993, Z100 dropped the older songs and began mixing in
alternative rock music which wasn't normally being played on Top 40 stations.
By the end of 1994, the majority of the station's music consisted of
alternative rock with only a few non-modern-rock-based songs per hour. The
station still played the current big hits by artists such as Madonna, TLC,
Mariah Carey, and others.
When Z100 was sold to Shamrock Broadcasting. Frankie Blue
would leave in 1995 and Sam Milkman would move up to his position.
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R&R's Top 25 CHR Hits 1993 |
Ratings, though nowhere near the top anymore, remained
steady at the station during much of the mid-1990s, but by March 1996, there
was a steep drop after WKTU signed on at 103.5 FM with a dance music format,
and WXRK adapted a full-time alternative rock format. Both stations took
listeners from Z100.
Steve Kingston and his assistant Sam Milkman left Z100 for
WXRK, while music director Andy Shane left for WKTU, joining another former
Z100 music director, Frankie Blue. Airstaff had also gradually begun leaving
the station beginning that February. Z100 had even stopped using the name
"Morning Zoo" the year before. Morning host John Lander left in
November 1995. That January, Steve Cochrane arrived to do mornings, but by May,
he was gone. Z100 was undergoing a crisis at this point. The station was sold
in a corporate deal to Chancellor Media.
In April 1996, the station brought in Tom Poleman as its new
programming director.
Initially, at that point, Z100 dropped all non-modern rock
titles and began playing strictly pop alternative. By May 1996, Z100 began
gradually replacing its on-air staff, and the harder alternative songs were
phased out.
Though initially it seemed that Z100 was becoming a modern
AC station, beginning that summer, the station gradually began to move back to
a mainstream Top 40 format, as it added pop music from such formats as R&B,
rap, and adult contemporary.
One of Poleman's biggest moves was to switch DJ Elvis Duran
from afternoons to the "Z Morning Zoo" (which was known as "The
Morning Show" for the previous several years), Z100's popular morning
show. Despite having shared the post with other hosts (such as Elliot Segal,
now at WWDC) through the years, Duran remains the "Head Zookeeper" to
this day.
By December 1996, Z100 was a full-time Top 40 station again.
Chancellor merged with Evergreen in 1997, making WKTU a sister station of Z100.
In a 1999 merger, Z100's parent company, Chancellor,
acquired Capstar, forming AM/FM Inc. Shortly after the merger was finalized,
AM/FM was bought by its current owners, Clear Channel Communications.