Michigan Radio
- Call Letters: WUOM, WVGR, WFUM
- Frequency: 91.7 Ann Arbor/Detroit, 104.1 Grand Rapids, 91.1 Flint
- Affiliations: BBC, NPR, PRI, and APM
- Networks: Changing Gears LJC, Impact Of Government - Michigan, Here's the Thing, Reveal, and American Public Media
Michigan Radio is a service of Michigan Public Media, the public broadcasting company at the University of Michigan. Michigan Radio is:
- WUOM 91.7 Ann Arbor/Detroit
- WVGR 104.1 Grand Rapids
- WFUM-FM 91.1 Flint
Radio began at the University of Michigan in the early 1920s, when the University began producing programs for WWJ in Detroit. The University's strategy at the time wasn't to own stations, but to produce programs for other stations throughout the state. By the early 1940s, the University changed direction and tried to apply for an AM frequency. All AM frequencies were unavailable, so in 1944, Michigan applied for a station at 43.1 MHz in the experimental FM band. The Federal Communications Commission eventually granted a license to Michigan for 91.7 in the newly-designated FM band and WUOM began broadcasting from Angell Hall on the Michigan campus in 1948. The station moved into its new home in the LS&A Building in 1949, where it stayed until 2003.
WVGR began broadcasting in December, 1961. WFUM-FM followed in 1985, serving the Flint area. (There was an earlier version of WFUM in Flint for a few years in the 1950's, repeating WUOM from Ann Arbor.)
Michigan Radio was a pioneer in educational broadcasting, producing programs in the 1950s and '60s that were heard throughout the country on educational, and some commercial, stations. The station was a charter member of NPR in 1971.
From its first days on the air, Michigan Radio's program service consisted of music, news, discussion programs, lectures, dramas and documentaries, most of which were produced in the station's four large studios at the LS&A Building. On July 1st, 1996, Michigan Radio inaugurated a new era, entering its second half-century of broadcasting with a news/talk format. Since then, Michigan Radio has grown to become one of the largest public radio stations in the country, with 451,000 weekly listeners to the stations (Fall 2005).
Series
The Environment Report's Rebecca Williams traveled to Isle Royale to meet the researchers who have been watching how wolves and moose interact for 54 years. The research project is the longest continuous study of any predator-prey system in the world.
- From: Michigan Radio
- Updated: Jan 24, 2013
What can be done to break the cycle of poverty and improve opportunities for the most disadvantaged children?
- From: Michigan Radio
- Updated: Feb 04, 2013
Latest Pieces
Bought by WVPE
- Added: May 28, 2024
- Length: 55:31
- Purchases: 1
- Added: May 01, 2015
- Length: 48:53
Bought by KBCS 91.3 FM Community Radio, Delta College Public Radio, and WAMC Northeast Public Radio
- Added: May 01, 2015
- Length: 03:44
- Purchases: 3
- Added: Apr 24, 2015
- Length: 03:16
- Added: Apr 17, 2015
- Length: 49:03
Bought by Delta College Public Radio
- Added: Apr 17, 2015
- Length: 03:07
- Purchases: 1
Bought by Delta College Public Radio and PRX Remix
- Added: Apr 10, 2015
- Length: 03:19
- Purchases: 2
Bought by Delta College Public Radio
- Added: Apr 03, 2015
- Length: 03:36
- Purchases: 1
Series: State of Opportunity
- Added: Mar 27, 2015
- Length: 03:46
Bought by WAMC Northeast Public Radio
- Added: Mar 27, 2015
- Length: 06:36
- Purchases: 1