This is a listing of the broadcasters and published media targeted at Peoria, Illinois. TV information includes cities where Peoria TV has been dominant, including Bloomington/Normal full-power TV, and LaSalle/Peru TV before cable TV.
Radio
Start dates are for the frequency/station license, not for callsign or programming that may have moved from license to license.
1580 WWXL (AM) Peoria (1947–?) — sister to 94.1 WWXL-FM; in 1948, was on the air on 1580, with a construction permit for 1590;[3] gone by 1959[8]
88.5 WECU Peoria (1990s) — on air around 1989;[1] time-shared frequency with WBNH Pekin; eventually went off air, allowing WBNH to go full-time
93.3 WEEK-FM Peoria (c. 1948) — sister to 1350 WEEK (AM); not yet on air at start of 1948;[3] already gone by 1959;[8] frequency later used by WMBD-FM (93.3 WPBG); callsign later used by 98.5 Eureka
94.1 WWXL-FM Peoria (c. 1948) — sister to 1580 WWXL (AM); not yet on air at start of 1948;[3] already gone by 1959;[8] now unusable: adjacent 94.3 later allocated to Chillicothe (now WPMJ)
95.7 WIRL-FM Peoria (c. 1948) — not yet on air at start of 1948;[3] already gone by 1959;[8] now unusable: 95.3 Pekin allocation moved to adjacent 95.5 in 1980s with WGLO
96.5 WMMJ-FM Peoria (c. 1948) — construction permit as of 1948;[3] already gone by 1959;[8] 96.5 allocated to nearby Farmington in 1990s (now WHPI)
100.9 WBOD Canton (c. 1989) — not yet on air in 1989;[1] likely never launched: adjacent 101.1 allocated to nearby Glasford in 1990s (now WZPN)
Low-power FM
103.1 WEUR-LP Eureka (c. 2001) — Likely never on air: Construction permit requested in August 2000 and issued 2001-06-27 to Eureka College; permit expired 2002-12-27 without license.[11]
106.3 Eureka (c. 2014) — Likely never on air: Construction permit requested in November 2013 and issued in January 2014 to Faith Baptist Temple in Eureka;[12] permit cancelled July 27, 2015 without license or callsign.[12][13]
Peoria area low-power TV
16 W16AZ Lacon (c. 1994) — construction permit for Kelly Communications; expired in 1996 without being licensed[14]
67 W67CW Peoria (1995–2005?) — M.C. Productions, 1101 S. "Mathew" St. and 1923 W. Lincoln Ave.,[15] 61605. Construction permit granted 1993-09-28; licensed 1995-06-29; application to move to channel 65 dismissed 1997-10-09; renewal on channel 67 on 1997-12-01; license expired 2005-12-01; deleted 2007-10-15.[16]
Bloomington TV
15 WBLN Bloomington (1955?–1959?) — sold by Cecil W. Roberts to Worth S. Rough's WBLN TV Inc. on 13 July 1955;[1] off the air but still holding permit in 1959;[8] empty channel allocation moved to Champaign in 1967 for WICD; callsign reused by channel 43 from 1982 start until it became WYZZ-TV
By March 1965, LaSalle, Spring Valley, and Peru already had CATV systems owned by The Television Transmission Company.[17]
35 WEEQ LaSalle (1957–1970s?) — LaSalle's only full-power allocation, channel 35, started as WEEQ, a co-owned satellite of WEEK-TV Peoria (which was on 43 Peoria then on 25 Peoria);[8][18] it was on the air as early as November 1957.[18] Channel allocation used by WWTO since 1 December 1986.[1]
71 W71AE (1964–1979?) — This carried co-owned 31 WMBD-TV Peoria. License granted 15 November 1962;[19] A picture of the 485-foot (148 m) Rohn tower and its 16-bay antenna is shown in a Rohn advertisement in the 1 July 1963 issue of Broadcasting.[20] Started around 1964.[18] Renewed November 1971.[21] WMBD-TV still shown as having "1 trans." in 1975 Yearbook.[page needed] Guessed as deleted in 1979 in W9WI translator listing.[22]
78 W78AC (1963–1964?) — This carried 19 WTVH Peoria (now WHOI) in the early 1960s. Listed in September 1962 TV Guide.[18] License granted 18 February 1963.[23] It was no longer in TV Guide by the end of 1964.[18]
Print
The Community Word — monthly community newspaper that covers neighborhoods and local politics[24]
^ abcdefghBroadcasting Yearbook Number. Washington, D.C.: Broadcasting Publications. 1948. Archived from the original on 2010-09-27. Retrieved 2010-08-30. Illinois AM on pages 94 & 98; Illinois FM on page 294. Page 326 shows 4 additional FM construction permits already in progress for Peoria.
^ abcdefghijklBroadcasting Yearbook Number. Washington, D.C.: Broadcasting Publications. 1959. Archived from the original on 2009-11-27. Retrieved 2010-08-30. Illinois radio on pages B-142–B-146. Page B-23 shows Bloomington TV; page B-25 shows LaSalle and Peoria TV as well as unused Galesburg and Pekin allotments.
^On 1350 kHz, 1948 Broadcasting Yearbook shows year 1947 for WEEK (AM); but 1989 Yearbook shows year 1960 for WXCL (AM). Reference does not mention whether 1947 station was deleted and replaced rather than transferred.
^Channel 19 signed on in October 1953: 1959 Yearbook gives October 12. 1989 Yearbook gives October 20.
^"For the Record, Renewal of licenses, all stations"(PDF). Broadcasting. 1971-08-16. pp. 40–42. Retrieved 2020-01-04. Broadcast Bureau granted renewal of licenses for the following UHF sand VHF translators ... W49AA Springfield and W71AE LaSalle, both Illinois
^Smith, D. "Defunct translators above channel 69". Retrieved 2011-01-10. "Now" is my best guess as to what happened to the translator in question. Many of these are probably wrong. W71AE ... Del 1979