LPFM radio

New director at Rice Lake Community Media builds on 40 years of service

As you drive down Main Street in Rice Lake, you’ll see something new emblazoned on the windows at 325 Main Street -- three large logos. One promotes Rice Lake Community Television’s cable channels -- 992 on Charter Spectrum and 993 on Mosaic/Celect Communications; one promotes its digital channels ricelaketv.com, Apple TV, Roku, and Amazon Fire; and one promotes its LPFM radio station, WYRL-LP 105.5 FM.  “I like to tell people there are ‘six ways to view Rice Lake Community Media,’ said James Wyngaard, Executive Director of Rice Lake Community Media.  “We have gotten a tremendous response to the window promotion.  I am really pleased with how much it has raised our profile.”  

Founded in 1982, Rice Lake Community Media has been housed in this building since 2000, right in the heart of this growing city of 9,000 people in Barron County -- and rightly so.  The media center is an integral part of the community. 

A newcomer to the city, James quickly caught on that his adopted home town holds high expectations for its local media center – particularly when it comes to high school football.  “It’s ingrained in the community that we’ll be covering all of the high school games.  This fall I covered the third game in the playoffs between Rice Lake and Baraboo and the last time I looked, it had over 4,000 views on the school district’s YouTube channel.”

The school district also relies on Rice Lake Community Media to cover every school board meeting and many band and choir concerts.  While he gets help from a high school student for game coverage, he readily admits that he’s open to getting help, either from volunteers or from a part-time employee.  “It’s a lot for one person,” said James.  “Right now, I’m a one-man band. We’re looking to hire someone in the new year to help me.”

Besides covering the school district, Rice Lake Community Media is the local connection to UW Eau Claire - Barron County. The media center has long covered Thursdays @ the U, a lecture series that covers such diverse topics as barn quilts, restorative justice, the history of women’s suffrage, and county administration.  “Recently there was a touching discussion about caring for family members with dementia from the point of view of the caregiver’s experience,” said James.  While he covers the lectures with just one camera, James incorporates the lecturer’s PowerPoints directly into the finished product to create the final show for television audiences. 

Rice Lake Community Media’s first responsibility, though, is coverage of local government.  “The greatest value of community television is giving people an unfiltered look at how their city and county is run – gavel to gavel government meeting coverage is especially important.  This coverage has never been more vital than in today’s media environment with all of the sniping back and forth,” said James.

James covers the Barron County Board plus five city meetings every month.  When the pandemic shut down in-person meetings, Rice Lake Community Media stepped up.  “Our residents would not have had access to government meetings without the video coverage and interactivity we provided.  We not only covered those meetings, but we made sure our residents were able to communicate with our officials during those meetings.  I think all community media stations showed their worth again to people who may have written us off awhile back.”  For years the media center has hosted monthly programs with the city’s state representatives.  These days it’s Senator Janet Bewley (D) and Rep. Dave Armstrong (R), who formerly served on the city’s cable commission. 

The independent cable commission that oversees the media center meets quarterly.  Recently, the commission was reduced from seven members to a more workable five members.  The commission gives James wide latitude to run the channel, but gets involved on policy decisions and large capital purchases.  “Members pop into the station now and again to see how it’s going and ask questions they have.  We have a good relationship,” said James.   

James is about to celebrate his one-year anniversary at the station. “I began shadowing former director, Ryan VanLanduyt, on December 14 and formally took the reins on January 1,” said James.  When asked about his accomplishments in the brief time he has been there, James said, “I think I’m most proud of being able to maintain and enhance the shows we produce from sports to interview programs.”  Recently, with the help of a fellow WCM member, James replaced the flat fluorescents in the studio with proper studio lighting.  “It makes every production look vastly improved,” said James.  He has also recently acquired the radio equipment to go live on location. 

During its forty year-old history, the media center’s managers have brought a variety of entertainment to residents.  For a while, when pro wrestling events came to town, Rice Lake Media was there covering it.  Music in the Park has also been a favorite for decades and beginning this summer, James will air it live on WYRL-LP 105.5 FM.   Holiday Parade coverage has also been a staple and James just recently covered this year’s parade for the first time. 

Besides serving local educational institutions and the government, Rice Lake Community Media is open to playing programs submitted by residents.  “If someone called me and had a great program they wanted to share, our policies allow us to put it on.”  

The six-year-old radio station is a mix of the three types of “PEG” – public, educational, and government programming.  You can listen to government meetings, educational lectures, music, and advice on animal care from an animal enthusiast.   

James promotes the channel and its upcoming programs through Facebook and the message board played between video programming on its channels.  Like all but a few local community TV PEG channels in the state, Charter Spectrum refuses to allow the schedule of Rice Lake Community TV to be included in the Electronic Program Guide and Celect Communications has followed suit.   

Just before Labor Day, when Charter Spectrum moved its hubsite facility from one building to another, it was unable to restore Rice Lake Community Media on the line-up.  Company officials informed James it could be five months before the channel would be up again. James said, “They wanted to know why I just don’t use the web instead of Cable TV.  Well, we do use the web but a lot of our residents like to watch our local coverage on cable.  As cable customers, I think they have a right to receive the service they signed up for.”  The company found a used part and the channel was back up in just under three weeks. 

James caught the community television bug his junior year of high school in Kaukauna when he helped record a sports tournament as an intern with the local cable company, Bresnan, which later sold its holdings to Time Warner.  During college while majoring in broadcast journalism at UW-Whitewater, he did a two-year internship with MATA Community Media where he hosted a morning show that promoted upcoming shows and featured the hosts of various programs. (MATA closed in 2017 as a result of the 2007 Video Competition Act passed by the state, which outlawed direct fees to community TV centers.)  “UW-Whitewater has a wonderful degree program that includes not only video production training, but also radio – the college has radio station WSUW.  When I was there, Peter Conover was in charge of television and the late Dr. Wilfred Tremblay was the radio director.  Both were terrific.  The television station – UWW TV --  is now run by Jim Mead and the program continues to be top-notch.”   

After James moved to Dane County, he soon began volunteering his time at PEG community media centers in Sun Prairie, McFarland, Stoughton, Oregon, and Fitchburg announcing sports and occasionally hosting election night coverage.  For his efforts, James was awarded the Friend of Access Award in 2018 by Wisconsin Community Media.  “I am very proud of this award,” said James.  “To be able to have my mother there at the conference in Oshkosh in 2018, and being so close to my hometown meant the world to me.”  When the Rice Lake Community Media manager position came up in 2020, he decided to apply.  “I had been working at US Cellular in Madison for more than 13 years and was comfortable.  The old saying goes ‘when you least expect something good to happen to you is when it usually does’ really applies in my case.  I really think moving to Rice Lake is one of the best professional moves I’ve ever made.” 

“Community media has been written off time and again,” said James, “but community media is not dead.  In this politicized climate, our role is more important than ever especially due to the consolidation of corporate media.  Newspapers have been on the decline for years and years and many local papers are now owned by large media corporations that have no community connection. Gray TV is scooping up broadcast affiliates right and left.  People are losing access to local news and information.  What we provide will be more and more important as time goes on.”

Award-winning Sun Prairie Media Center has fun drawing in viewers and listeners

Hailing from one of the most rapidly-growing communities in Wisconsin, the Sun Prairie Media Center’s staff of four full-time employees manages and oversee two cablecast channels, KSUN and KIDS-4, as well as their highly-respected LPFM radio station 103.5 The Sun.  Sun Prairie Media Center’s KSUN channel boasts a wide assortment of local origination programming including a weekly movie review program, a weekly local newscast, regular interviews with city staff and council members, high school sports, and a wide range of governmental meetings. One spot up the dial, the KIDS-4 channel is the only local access channel in the country entirely devoted to children.

KSUN

KSUN in Sun Prairie is widely accessible and open to the community with shows produced and coordinated by many different local volunteers. “The amount of local programs being done at the SPMC is what attracted me to this job in the first place,” says SPMC director Jeff Robbins. “When I discovered that the SPMC was producing all of these cool hyperlocal shows I knew it would be a great place to be. I’m proud to say that in my time we’ve greatly increased our local production. Great shows we’ve launched in the last year or so include Sun Prairie News, our weekly newscast, Roundtable Sun Prairie, which is like ESPN’s Pardon the Interruption but with local topics, and The Parenting Game, which strives to help mom and dad be better parents.” KSUN is on Spectrum Channel 983 in their section of Dane County as well as on TDS Channel 13 and 1013 in HD. KSUN is also available on Roku and Apple TV devices, streaming online at sunprairiemediacenter.com and on their own app, free to download from the App Store and Google Play.

KIDS-4

KIDS-4 – TV for kids, by kids – is the most unique aspect of the Sun Prairie Media Center.  The 24-hour channel completely consists of programming produced by students who are enrolled in the SPMC’s KIDS-4 after school program. The SPMC staff provides media literacy training and technical support to their students, who attend classes (“crews”) held at the SPMC after school four days a week. The kids ----- who typically range in age from fourth through eighth grade -- meet weekly from October to April and are taught the basics of production, including camera operation, sound, lighting, directing, animation, and yes, even being on-camera, eventually working their way up to assisting with the production of Thursday Night Live, KIDS-4’s own live weekly program. “KIDS-4 is really a remarkable program,” said Robbins. “It was created back in the 70s to make sure that kids had access to creating content. Being involved in that creation can’t help but lead to greater understanding of how media professionals compose their messages. Fast-forward 40 years and all of us – not just kids – are constantly bombarded with media messages. KIDS-4 has never been more relevant than it is today.” KIDS-4 is available on Spectrum Channel 984 and TDS Channel 14 and 1014 in HD and streams everywhere that KSUN does. 

103.5 FM The Sun Community Radio

103.5 FM The Sun Community Radio hit the airwaves in the summer of 2015 providing a new and exciting medium for both the station’s listeners and the station’s content creators. The Sun’s lineup consists of dozens of locally-produced programs such as Take Immediate Cover, Song Archaeology, Council Playback, Good Morning Sun Prairie, Inside Sun Prairie Police, and many more. The Sun also ventures out into the community to bring live interviews and commentary from local events such as Corn Fest, Strawberry Fest, and many others. “The community aspect is my favorite part of the radio station,” said Robbins. “We used to have booths at local events and frankly not have much to do. Now we do live broadcasts and that not only makes it more fun for our staff and volunteers to be at the event, but it makes event attendees more interested in checking us out. Broadcasting live is a big draw.” The Sun earns dozens of awards for their programming annually. You can hear 103.5 FM The Sun online at sunprairiemediacenter.com or at tunein.com or on the radio waves if you happen to be in the area. 

Local Sports Coverage

Sun Prairie is proud of the quality of its high school athletics, and the Sun Prairie Media Center is there to bring live coverage of sporting events on both KSUN and 103.5 FM The Sun. The SPMC has covered everything from wrestling to volleyball, but football, baseball, basketball, softball, and hockey are the sports covered most regularly. The SPMC has traveled the state bringing sports coverage back to the citizens of Sun Prairie including regular season, playoffs, and other WIAA events though the generous contributions of its volunteer announcers and business sponsors. “Sports coverage is probably our most popular programming,” said Robbins. “We’re excited for the fall of 2022 when we will have TWO high schools with full athletic programs to begin covering.”

Sun Prairie Media Center Staff and Commission

The Sun Prairie Media Center is guided by their Executive Director Jeff Robbins. Jeff is a veteran of the television industry working for different broadcast stations in the Madison area before starting with the SPMC in 2014.  Alongside Jeff are two veteran “Production Managers”: Rachel Packard recently celebrated 20 years at the SPMC, Mara Trusty joined up in 2010, and Colin Lessig came onboard in 2019. All of the staff work with volunteers, city staff, and KIDS-4 students to cover the growing community of Sun Prairie the best they can. The staff is assisted by the Sun Prairie Media Center Commission., a seven-member advisory board featuring involved community members, a rotating City Council member as well as Wisconsin State Representative Gary Hebl.

Where to Find the Sun Prairie Media Center

The Sun Prairie Media Center is located within the Sun Prairie Public Library building at 1350 Linnerud Drive in Sun Prairie.  KSUN can be found on Spectrum Cable 983 and TDS 13/1013, online at www.SunPrairieMediaCenter.com and streaming on Roku and Apple TV devices, online at sunprairiemediacenter.com and on their own app, free to download from the App Store and Google Play. KIDS-4 can be found on Spectrum Cable 984 as well as TDS on 14/1014 and online at www.kids4.tv.   Those of you wanting to check out the award winning programming on 103.5 FM The Sun can venture over to the Sun Prairie area and tune to 103.5 FM or check out the live stream at www.SunPrairieMediaCenter.com or tunein.com.