“You’re listening to WMBC, UMBC’s freeform student radio station. And you’re in the 2000s right now, thanks to the radio time machine.”
Four years ago, hearing those words would have been impossible. UMBC’s radio station, WMBC—now a bustling hive of musical joy, live concerts, and record painting parties—had been silent after a lack of student staffing and resource issues, leading the student group to hang up their headphones.
But recently, music is on the airwaves again as students and staff work around the clock to breathe new life into the station. After combining operations with The Retriever, UMBC’s long-running student newspaper, and Bartleby, UMBC’s Creative Arts Journal since 1972, WMBC found a new home in the University Center, and a fresh start as part of the newly chartered Student Media Center.

Legacy media outlets
Retrievers have been media-conscious from the university’s inception. Within the first month of classes at UMBC, a newsroom was established, and the first issue of the student newspaper was published on September 19, 1966. Ever since then, the tradition of reporting student and campus life continued to expand and evolve.
By 1979, the student-run radio station, WMBC, was founded. Originally called the WUMD Radio Club, the station began broadcasting over carrier current circuits, enabling students to tune in from their dorms and at a couple of dining areas on campus.
In recent years, these media outlets, which depend on the ever-changing student body, took a hit. But students weren’t willing to give up their media platforms so easily.

In 2022, WMBC had been inactive for roughly four years. Before COVID even, the student group was having trouble staffing the station, but the org really lost its footing—and its physical space—during the pandemic. Sean Stultz ’24, computer science, WMBC’s station manager his senior year and their chief engineer prior to that, was storing the station’s equipment in his Hillside apartment in Breton, until the station found a permanent place for it.
Around the same time, The Retriever, the student-run newspaper, ran into similar complications. They were working without a dedicated advisor, and the weight of managing everything from organizing meetings to pitching and writing stories, publishing and distributing both in print and online, marketing/running social media accounts, and much more became too much for students to handle alone.
That changed at the end of 2023, when Ann Tropea, the assistant director of the Center for Democracy and Civic Life, was hired as the newspaper’s media advisor. The Retriever members say she has helped immensely with finding advertisers, organizing documents, and advocating for them as a student organization.
“I began working with students from The Retriever and WMBC to create a shared structure that went beyond the two groups simply sharing space in our suite of offices in the UC,” says Tropea, who has a background in law and communications.
The student-run creative arts journal Bartleby joined the other media groups in 2024, and after a year of planning, SGA recently approved a new charter organization—the Student Media Center. The group’s stated mission is to “create a more engaged, informed, and civically empowered student body, and assert First Amendment freedoms at UMBC through the active production of student-run media.”
The Student Events Board (seb) is the only other charter organization at UMBC, so this is historic, says Tropea. And the new structure ensures the longevity and continuous operations of not just WMBC, but The Retriever and Bartleby as well, Tropea adds, who during this planning period was directing her efforts into assisting with WMBC’s revitalization.
Creating a shared mission
Michelle Ibino, a biological sciences junior, who is the events manager for WMBC, says, “Sharing a space and a mission has been positive as it allows for students to cross over into each club. Members of the station have found and gone on to write/work for The Retriever and vice-versa.”
The Retriever has been able to seamlessly work with WMBC to produce stories that provide coverage about the station’s events, and it’s also common to see members of The Retriever enjoying WMBC’s events, which turns the newsroom into a Tiny Desk Concert vibe. “The WMBC/Retriever space is small, but turns out to be a really cool music venue if you just rearrange a few chairs and tables!” says Tim Rogers, The Retriever’s music columnist.
“We might be known as a commuter school, but that doesn’t mean we can’t have a rich student culture just like any other university. The efforts of The Retriever and WMBC bring life to campus,” says Rogers, a sophomore.
When it comes to on-campus events, WMBC hosts concerts, album listening parties, zine creations, record painting, and other activities. WMBC puts together bills that showcase student artists, as well as local bands from the surrounding Baltimore area.

While the newsroom can accommodate only a few dozen people, WMBC is able to organize large-scale events in different places around campus. “WMBC has put together a bunch of really cool music events, some in collaboration with Retriever Music Society (RMS) and others run entirely by the club,” says Rogers. The station’s previous spring music festival was a collaboration with RMS, taking place in the UC Ballroom.
When planning events, Ibino knows how crucial it is that the students have both on-campus and off-campus options. “The off-campus concerts we run are especially important because they allow UMBC students to connect with the large local Baltimore/DMV music scene. As a school in the Baltimore area, I think it is especially important for us to encourage students to explore, interact, and support the Baltimore community, and these concerts are a great way for students to start building connections to do that. Further, our events help like-minded students find each other,” she says.
In addition to events, the integration of the groups has positively impacted campus-wide projects. This has helped both groups to become better advocates for the student community. “Advocating for different groups is an important job that both organizations share as part of the Student Media Center,” says Ibino. “Collaboration is what helps us better represent the diverse voices and interests of the UMBC community.”
Musical connections
Although he’s graduated—and no longer housing the station’s equipment—Stultz has stayed connected with WMBC and appreciates watching it thrive. “The overall campus is thankful for a lot of the stuff that we do,” says Stultz. “We’re equally thankful back to the people on campus who support us and everything because we wouldn’t be able to do any of this without them.”
In addition to being the events manager for WMBC, Ibino is one of the many DJs who broadcast a show through the station. Currently, there are about 40 different shows, and the station is on air weekly from Monday through Friday. With her show “Reverie,” Ibino connects with other students and educates anyone interested in the goth subculture.


Left: NYC-based band Lyoko at The Ottobar in Baltimore at a WMBC-off campus event. Right: Audience members watch Omanti perform at WMBC’s Great Pumpkin concert in the Student Media Center. Photos by Erin Bennett ’25.
This platform has been valuable to her and has made her feel more grounded within the community. “One of the core principles of the goth community is to be involved and contribute to the subculture,” says Ibino. “Getting to do that through my show has made me feel more connected within the scene. Creating a space where people feel welcome to explore and embrace goth culture has helped me grow more confident in my identity and strengthened my connection to the broader alternative community.”
Another DJ, Daniela Salguero, a junior psychology major, has also used her show as a way to explore her cultural identity. Her show, “Luna Roja Radio,” focuses on alternative Latin American music, and she provides commentary as to what certain songs represent in a wider political context. She explains, “Every week, I pick a theme to hone in on, and I think it’s a really great way for me to just get my feelings out there and to connect more with myself.”
The media organizations have enriched campus life by helping students to get more involved with the Baltimore community. They have also served as an inclusive space for everyone.
The door to the Student Media Center is almost always open. With the station broadcast aired on the office speakers, students are there, working and socializing under the band posters and stories that dot the walls—they’re making and sharing media but they’re also continuing a legacy for the next generation of Retriever writers, editors, and DJs.
Tags: At Play, Center for Democracy and Civic Life, Spring 2025, student life, The Retriever, WMBC