'Heartbroken' fans of pioneering Raleigh jazz station WSHA mourn the station's sale

Friday, March 30, 2018
RALEIGH, NC (WTVD) -- Raleigh's WSHA FM is becoming the latest casualty of the changing media landscape.

Back in 1968, Shaw University bought the station (it's 88.9 on the dial) and it was a huge deal - the school became the first historically black college in the country to own its own public radio station.
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Fifty years later, leaders at Shaw think it's time to move on.



"I spent a lot of long nights in there," said Brent Clark as he pointed to the second floor of Shaw's on-campus radio studio.

Clark arrived at Shaw as a bright-eyed freshman in 2007 with big dreams of one day owning his own radio station. He got his start hosting a live Saturday night hip-hop show on WSHA.



When he heard this week's news that university was selling off the station's frequencies, Clark said, "I was heartbroken. I can honestly say I was heartbroken. It really feels like a cornerstone of my experience from Shaw that is being taken away."

WSHA was the first public station owned by a historically black college.



Chances are, if you tuned into 88.9 during the last 50 years, you went there for the jazz. The station's well-curated playlist pf jazz and blues has a loyal following.
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"The jazz was a definitely a major component," Clark said.

And after hooking you on the jazz, the station hoped to hold listeners with a potpourri of locally-produced shows, featuring local artists you wouldn't hear anywhere else.

"To me, it meant the community had a voice," said Clark. "The community had somewhere they could go to for an outlet."



The university won't reveal how much it's selling the ownership of its frequencies for. A company called Educational Media Foundation is the buyer.

The school is keeping ownership of its southeast Raleigh radio tower, call letters, and broadcasting equipment, too.
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But word of the pending sale sparked an outcry from station alumni like Clark and loyal fans.

A change.org petition to stop the sale already has nearly 2,000 signatures.

"WSHA is a station for the community," Clark said. "So it takes the community to actually save the station."

University officials didn't want to go on camera about the sale. But in a statement, the school insisted that while 88.9 is going away, they will continue to provide high-quality, modern broadcast training for students.



The FCC still needs to approve the sale. And if the deal goes through, WSHA will continue - but only on the internet.
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