Ideastream was formed in July 2001 through a
merger of equals between WVIZ and then-NPR member WCPN (since supplanted by WCLV), which up to that point operated separately as Educational Television Association of Metropolitan Cleveland and Cleveland Public Radio, respectively. Talks of a cooperative agreement between the two entities began in 1999, but was first proposed in 1993, when co-founder Jerrold Wareham was named as WVIZ's general manager.[1] WCLV, then operating as a
Lorain-licensed station
at 104.9FM, was donated to the group in 2011.[5] Since 2021, Ideastream has operated WKSU and its
repeater network on behalf of owner
Kent State University,[6] and has been Cleveland and
Akron's sole NPR station of record since March 28, 2022.[7] Kevin E. Martin has been the organization's president/
CEO since January 9, 2017,[8] succeeding Jerrold Wareham.[9] Jenny Northern, a staffer with WCLV since 2001, was elevated to station manager in 2014[10] and became general manager for all stations in 2020.[11]
All stations in the group jointly rebranded as Ideastream Public Media on June 15, 2021, to celebrate the entity's 20th anniversary.[2]
WKSU was founded by
Kent State University in 1950; Ideastream has operated the station since October 1, 2021, via a
public service operating agreement with the university. Originally broadcasting solely to the campus population as a
non-commercial educational station, WKSU has been an NPR news and information affiliate since 1973, and is the originating radio station for the
City Club of Cleveland's Friday Forum.[12] Licensed to
Kent, Ohio, WKSU's signal is rebroadcast full-time over a network of five full-power
repeaters and two low-power
translators. With a combined 22-county coverage area and potential audience of 3.6 million people, WKSU and its repeater network boast the largest collective footprint for an FM radio station in Ohio.[13] Since 2022, it has also served
Lorain County and the western portion of Greater Cleveland via Lorain-licensed
WCPN (104.9FM).[14]
The region's only full-time
classical music and
jazz outlet, WCLV was founded on November 1, 1962, as a commercial radio station
at 95.5FM.[17] A complex asset and intellectual property swap on July 3, 2001, re-established WCLV on 104.9FM as part of a long-term plan initiated by founding owners Robert Conrad and Rich Marschner to preserve the format from being subsumed by ownership consolidation in the radio industry.[18][19] With station operations moved to the Idea Center in 2010,[20] WCLV was donated to Ideastream in 2011[5] and converted to non-commercial status in 2013.[21][22] WCLV has been the originating station for
Cleveland Orchestra radio broadcasts since 1965 and for Weekend Radio since 1982.[23]
WCLV's current 90.3FM frequency was previously home to WCPN, one of Ideastream's two founding partners and, from 1984 to 2022, competed with WKSU as the region's other NPR member.[24] It is also the successor station to WBOE, which the
Cleveland Board of Education operated from 1938 to 1978,[25] one of the first formally licensed non-commercial educational radio stations on the FM dial and one of the first FM stations in Ohio.[26]
Ideastream's television service, WVIZ, was founded on February 7, 1965, as the 100th public television station in the United States.[27] WVIZ at launch boasted the first female
general manager of a major-market television station in the United States. Betty Cope, who played an active role in the station's formation and original focus towards
educational television programming for school districts and telecourses for area colleges;[28] WVIZ gradually adopted the conventional
PBS Kids and PBS lineups starting in the early 1990s. Through WVIZ, Ideastream jointly operates and manages
The Ohio Channel (which is carried on a WVIZ subchannel) and the Ohio Public Radio and Television Statehouse News Bureau.[2][4]
See also
WNEO/WEAO, Northeast Ohio's secondary PBS member station and
Youngstown's primary PBS station.
^Rosenberg, Donald; Feran, Tom (November 2, 2000). "Arts group will take ownership of WCLV". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. p. 1A.
Archived from the original on March 29, 2022. Retrieved September 22, 2021 – via NewsBank.
^Spencer, Carrie (September 2, 2001).
"Radio station saves classics, supports the arts". The Tribune. Coshocton, Ohio. Associated Press. p. 2C.
Archived from the original on March 29, 2022. Retrieved March 28, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Education by FM"(PDF). Broadcasting. Vol. 20, no. 5. February 10, 1941. p. 49.
Archived(PDF) from the original on November 8, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2022 – via World Radio History.
(*) – indicates station is in one of Ohio's primary
TV markets (**) – indicates station is in an out-of-state TV market, but reaches a small portion of Ohio