WJZ-FM signed on November 22, 1963 as WCBC, owned by Christian Broadcasting Company. The station was purchased on March 6, 1968, by Key Broadcasting, who changed its call sign to WBMD-FM. The FM station was paired with a country AM station, WBMD, already owned by Key. In 1970, the FM's format became hard rock at night, with country during the day. On July 5, 1971, the station's call sign was changed to WKTK and the format shifted to all progressive rock music. From 1977 to 1979, WKTK played disco music, but later changed to oldies with the decline of disco. In 1982, the call letters became WQSR as the station planned to join Super Radio, a new national music network to be operated by ABC. Shortly before Super Radio's scheduled launch, ABC decided not to go forward with the network. WQSR kept its new call letters. WQSR was then sold to Sconnix Broadcasting in 1988 and continued playing oldies music. The station was sold to Infinity Radio in 1993, then passed on to CBS Radio in 1997.
WXYV
On September 8, 2001, at 6 a.m., WQSR moved to WXYV's 102.7 FM frequency to broadcast on a better signal. After two days of simulcasting, at 3 p.m. on September 10, 105.7 FM became the new home for WXYV, with an urban contemporarymusic format known as "X105.7." The call letter swap between the two stations became official 4 days later. Both stations were owned by Infinity Broadcasting. The morning show was a simulcast of former V103 and 92Q personality Frank Ski's morning show, originating from WVEE in Atlanta.
Revival of WHFS
However, X105.7 failed to compete against WERQ-FM, which resulted in WXYV flipping to hot talk on March 10, 2003. The station was an affiliate for Howard Stern and the Don and Mike Show. The station adopted the name "Live 105.7", which would later change to "105.7 Free FM" in 2006, and then "Baltimore's FM Talk 105.7" in 2007 after CBS phased out the Free FM branding nationwide. Meanwhile, Infinity Broadcasting saw an unexpected public reaction to their decision to change the format of 99.1 FM in Washington. The story was covered by local TV stations for many days afterwards, and mentioned nationally by The Washington Post, The Howard Stern Show, and The Today Show. The corporate offices of Infinity Broadcasting in New York City were flooded with phone calls and e-mails from irate listeners. An online petition protesting the format change gathered tens of thousands of signatures in only a few days. Media attention was attracted by a public protest in downtown Washington, outside a skate shop where WHFS maintained a remote storefront studio in its last few months. WHFS' main competitor, DC101, paid tribute to the station, airing many memories of WHFS from its DJs and listeners. Infinity Broadcasting responded by resurrecting the WHFS format on nights and weekends at 105.7, beginning at 7 p.m. on January 21, 2005 with former WHFS afternoon DJ Tim Virgin. The station rebranded itself as "The Legendary HFS, Live on 105.7"; Infinity Broadcasting moved the WHFS call letters to the station days later. 'HFS was pulled from the airwaves again on February 1, 2007, immediately before [|KMS on HFS] premiered, yet retained the WHFS call letters traditionally associated with the music the station used to broadcast. Currently, HFS2 and [|Locals Only with Neci] remain WHFS's only ties to its original format.
HFS2
In 2006, WHFS began to broadcast a digital signal for radios using the new HD Radio technology, and launched an all-music station named "HFS2" on its second HD Radio channel. The station focuses primarily on new alternative rock and indie rock, and currently has no DJs or commercials. On January 19, 2007, the online stream of "HFS2" was launched with the slogan "What You've Been Missing" hinting at the death of HFS music on the regular 105.7 frequency. On Thursday, November 1, 2007, Neci Crowder began broadcasting on HFS2 from 8am to 1 pm. This marked the first time a live DJ has been heard on HFS2.
105.7 the Fan
On November 3, 2008, WHFS flipped to a sports talk format, branded as "105.7 The Fan." Along with the format change came a new callsign: WJZ-FM. The new station has Ed Norris and Rob Long in the morning drive, Bob Haynie and Vinny Cerrato, and Scott Garceau and Jeremy Conn one week later. Orioles broadcasts moved from WJZ-FM back to WBAL in 2011. But in 2015, WJZ-FM reacquired the broadcast rights to Orioles games from WBAL for the second time. On February 2, 2017, CBS agreed to merge CBS Radio with Entercom, currently the fourth-largest radio broadcaster in the United States; the sale will be conducted using a Reverse Morris Trust so that it will be tax-free. While CBS shareholders retain a 72% ownership stake in the combined company, Entercom was surviving entity, separating WJZ radio from WJZ-TV. The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on the 17th. However, despite no longer sharing an owner with WJZ-TV, the deal grants the station the right to use the call letters in perpetuity.
Signal note
WJZ-FM is short-spaced to WQXA-FM105.7 The X as they operate on the same frequency and the cities they are licensed to serve are only 48 miles apart. The minimum distance between two Class B stations operating on the same channel according to current FCC rules is 150 miles. Both stations use directional antennas to reduce their signals toward each other.