Revision as of 03:56, 28 November 2012 editVjmlhds (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers74,054 edits →Current programming← Previous edit | Revision as of 21:26, 4 December 2012 edit undoVjmlhds (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers74,054 edits Adding OSU to affiliations due to airing Thad Matta's weekly coach's show and the handful of OSU hoops games WKNR slides over to KNR2 every season.Next edit → | ||
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|callsign_meaning = {{nowrap|'''W W''' "]"}} | |callsign_meaning = {{nowrap|'''W W''' "]"}} | ||
|former_callsigns = WBKC (2006)<br>WABQ (1958–2006)<br>WJMO (1947–58) | |former_callsigns = WBKC (2006)<br>WABQ (1958–2006)<br>WJMO (1947–58) | ||
|affiliations = ]<br>]<br>{{nowrap|]}}<br>] | |affiliations = ]<br>]<br>{{nowrap|]}}<br>]<br>] | ||
|owner = {{nowrap|]}} | |owner = {{nowrap|]}} | ||
|licensee = {{nowrap|Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC}} | |licensee = {{nowrap|Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC}} | ||
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Other locally originated programming includes the general talk ''Rick Rantz Show'', and the religious/gospel oriented ''Jae the Gospel Kidd Show'' (both air Saturdays).<ref>http://www.espncleveland.com/page.php?page_id=108</ref> | Other locally originated programming includes the general talk ''Rick Rantz Show'', and the religious/gospel oriented ''Jae the Gospel Kidd Show'' (both air Saturdays).<ref>http://www.espncleveland.com/page.php?page_id=108</ref> | ||
During football season, specialty programming includes ''Falcons Football Weekly'' (Notre Dame College) Thursday afternoons, ''High School Hysteria Gameday'' with Kenny Roda, Dave DeNatale, and Aaron Goldhammer Friday evenings, and ''High School Hysteria Rewind'' with Jason Gibbs Saturday mornings. | During football season, specialty programming includes ''Falcons Football Weekly'' (Notre Dame College) Thursday afternoons, ''High School Hysteria Gameday'' with Kenny Roda, Dave DeNatale, and Aaron Goldhammer Friday evenings, and ''High School Hysteria Rewind'' with Jason Gibbs Saturday mornings. During basketball season, WWGK airs the weekly show featuring ] men's basketball head coach ] on Tuesday evenings (via the OSU Radio Network). | ||
===Play-by-play coverage=== | ===Play-by-play coverage=== |
Revision as of 21:26, 4 December 2012
Radio station in Cleveland, OhioBroadcast area | Greater Cleveland |
---|---|
Frequency | 1540 kHz |
Branding | ESPN 1540 KNR2 |
Programming | |
Format | Sports radio |
Affiliations | Dial Global ESPN Radio Notre Dame College Falcons Ohio State Buckeyes Premiere Networks |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
Sister stations | WKNR |
History | |
First air date | November 11, 2006 (as WWGK) June 1, 1947 (as WJMO) |
Former call signs | WBKC (2006) WABQ (1958–2006) WJMO (1947–58) |
Call sign meaning | W W "Good Karma" |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 70659 |
Class | D |
Power | 1,000 watts (daytime only) |
Transmitter coordinates | 41°30′10.00″N 81°37′57.00″W / 41.5027778°N 81.6325000°W / 41.5027778; -81.6325000 |
Links | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | espncleveland |
WWGK (1540 AM) – branded ESPN 1540 KNR2 – is a commercial sports radio station licensed to Cleveland, Ohio. Owned by Good Karma Broadcasting, WWGK is the secondary Cleveland affiliate for ESPN Radio; together with sister station WKNR, WWGK is often referred to as ESPN Cleveland. The WWGK studios are located at the Galleria at Erieview in Downtown Cleveland, and the station's transmitter resides near Euclid Avenue on Cleveland's east side.
WWGK is the Cleveland affiliate for hour one of The Jim Rome Show. The station is also the flagship station for Notre Dame College of Ohio football.
History
WJMO (1540 AM)
Template:Distinguish2 The station's roots trace back to WJMO, which went on the air on June 1, 1947 licensed to Cleveland as a daytime-only broadcaster at 1540 kHz with studios at 2157 Euclid Avenue and a power of 1000 watts. The owner was Wentworth J. Marshall, formerly head of the Marshall Drug Co. chain, and the general manager was David M. Baylor. When it debuted, WJMO was the only Cleveland radio station without a network affiliation. As a result, the station specialized in recorded music. Early staff included Gene Carroll (mornings), Howie Lund (afternoons), and Billy Evans on sports.
In 1948 WJMO carried the football games of Western Reserve College Red Cats, both at home from League Park and on the road. In the first broadcast on September 25 Gil Gibbons called the action as Western Reserve met Western Michigan in Kalamazoo.
On June 5, 1952, in an attempt to emphaze music rather than DJs, Baylor issued an orders to play four songs every 15 minutes. As a result a number of DJs chose to leave the station. Later than year, Wentworth sold the station on August 20 for $100,000 to Maryland-based United Broadcasting, headed by Richard Eaton. Ownership was later put in the name of Eaton's affiliated company Friendly Broadcasting of Ohio. An FM license was granted for the 106.5 MHz facility that was to take the WJMO-FM call letters, but it was slated to sign on by 1959.
Some of the Announcers at WJMO in the 1970s included Rudy Green, Wes Dickenson, Billy Black, Bill Taylor, Lynn Tolliver, John O'Day, J.L. Wright, Mike Payne, Mary Holt and Ken Hawkins to name a few.
WABQ (1540 AM)
Template:Distinguish2 Meanwhile, WSRS, which was founded by S.R. Sague on December 12, 1947, broadcast 24-hours a day on 1490 kHz licensed to suburban Cleveland Heights, and had an FM complement at 95.3 MHz. On January 14, 1959, WJMO bought WSRS (at 1490-AM and 95.3-FM) and exchanged respective callsigns, studios/facilities, and staffs. Both 1540-AM and 106.5-FM were sold off to Tuschman Broadcasting Company with the switch; the 1540 facility immediately became WABQ and the 106.5 facility instead signed on as WABQ-FM before switching to WXEN that next year, carrying an ethnic format.
Detroit-based Booth Broadcasting took ownership of WABQ and WXEN in the mid-1960s. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, both WABQ and WJMO focused on programming aimed at Cleveland's African American community, featuring mostly black on-air talent.
It was best known for a Top 40/R&B format as "Tiger Radio" in the late 1960s (Booth's WJLB in Detroit used the same "Tiger Radio" slogan at the time), featuring personalities like Lynn Tolliver and Ken Hawkins, Michael "The Lover" Payne and King Curtis Shaw, Jimmy O'jay, Jimmy Stephens, Jim Raggs and Eddie Edwards. Mike Dix, Rich Ford, Chuck Denson, Otis Rush and Duane Jones were just a few of the many news announcers the station featured during the late 1960s and early seventies. The station's popular "Ring-A-Ding" talk show featured Olympic gold medalist Harrison Dillard who also handled sportscasts. Gospel programming in the late weekday morning hours was presented by Cleveland's First Lady of Gospel, Mary Holt. Sundays featured wall-to-wall church programming with Denver Wilborn as host.
Throughout the late 1960s and into the early to mid 1970s WABQ and WJMO competed for listeners among Cleveland's African-American community with WJMO often enjoying a slight ratings edge due to its ability to remain on the air after local sunset.
In April 1968 WABQ received special temporary authority from the FCC to stay on the air overnight in an attempt to help inform and comfort the community following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. The special authority to remain on the air 24 hours a day expired after just a day or two.
WABQ's heyday quietly faded into the 1970s and 1980s, and went through numerous format changes since. Booth Broadcasting sold off WABQ in 1984, and several different ownership changes followed as a result. Eventually, the station assumed a gospel music format and had local ownership for much of those years since.
WWGK
In July 2006, the station was sold by D&E Communications (headed by Dale Edwards) to Beaver Dam, Wisconsin-based Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC., headed by Craig Karmazin, for $2.5 million. Just before the sale closed, WABQ switched call letters with Painesville, Ohio station WBKC 1460-AM - owned by Radio Advantage One, LLC, a sister company to D&E Communications - on October 24, 2006.
Four days later, WABQ's programming officially moved to 1460, and the 1540 facility relauched as "ESPN Radio 1540" with a sports/talk format. The station temporarily kept the WBKC call letters before adopting the WWGK callsign that November 7.
WWGK's new format at 1540 first carried the entire ESPN Radio daytime lineup on its daytime only broadcasts, much like Good Karma-owned Milwaukee station WAUK. Speculation focused on plans to purchase nighttime clearance on WERE in order to have a 24-hour network clearance. Moreover, a companion "1540 Days - 1300 Nights" logo on WWGK's website had confirmed this, though it was since removed. There was never any official word that such an arrangement was ever attempted.
On December 4, 2006, Crain's Cleveland Business reported that Craig Karmazin's Good Karma Broadcasting was to purchase WKNR for $7 million, eventually combining both stations under one facility at The Galleria at Erieview.
On February 23, 2007, it was made official that WKNR would regain its former ESPN Radio affiliation, while WWGK would take the branding AM 1540 KNR2, (a play on ESPN2) in keeping with its sister station. In April 2010, the station began branding itself as ESPN 1540 KNR2.
The new schedule also made WWGK the Fox Sports Radio affiliate in Cleveland, but still retained ESPN Radio shows hosted by Colin Cowherd and Dan Patrick (whose time slot was eventually taken over by current midday host Scott Van Pelt), and the final hour of Mike and Mike in the Morning - all of which WKNR is unable to air otherwise. The station also started a 24-hour streaming audio service on its website.
On August 29, 2011, WKRK-FM 92.3 switched from alternative rock to a sports talk format, becoming the new Fox Sports Radio affiliate in Cleveland. AM 1540 then replaced FSR with further ESPN Radio programming.
Current programming
Weekday programming includes local morning drive program Munch in the Morning hosted by Mark "Munch" Bishop with T.J. Zuppe and the last hour of Mike and Mike in the Morning with Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic (ESPN Radio). Middays feature The Herd with Colin Cowherd (ESPN Radio) and the first hour of The Jim Rome Show (Premiere Radio Networks). SVP & Russillo hosted by Scott Van Pelt and Ryen Russillo, Coach & Company hosted by Jonathan Coachman, and Hill & Schlereth hosted by Mike Hill and Mark Schlereth (all from ESPN Radio) comprise the remaining weekday schedule until sign-off.
Other locally originated programming includes the general talk Rick Rantz Show, and the religious/gospel oriented Jae the Gospel Kidd Show (both air Saturdays).
During football season, specialty programming includes Falcons Football Weekly (Notre Dame College) Thursday afternoons, High School Hysteria Gameday with Kenny Roda, Dave DeNatale, and Aaron Goldhammer Friday evenings, and High School Hysteria Rewind with Jason Gibbs Saturday mornings. During basketball season, WWGK airs the weekly show featuring Ohio State men's basketball head coach Thad Matta on Tuesday evenings (via the OSU Radio Network).
Play-by-play coverage
WWGK is the flagship station for Notre Dame College football (for night games that extend past AM 1540's broadcast hours, the games will be streamed on the station's website) and shares flagship duties for the MAC men's and women's basketball tournaments with sister station WKNR. ESPN 1540 KNR2 also airs select daytime Lake Erie Monsters hockey and Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball games that flagship/main affiliate WKNR slide over due to schedule conflicts.
WWGK also airs national sports broadcasts of MLB on ESPN Radio, NBA on ESPN Radio, NCAA football (ESPN Radio), NCAA men's basketball (ESPN Radio and Dial Global), and NASCAR coverage (PRN/MRN)
References
- AM 1540's Early Years (Case Western Reserve University)
- http://espn.go.com/espnradio/schedule
- http://www.espncleveland.com/page.php?page_id=108
External links
- Official website
- Facility details for Facility ID WWGK ({{{2}}}) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- {{{2}}} in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
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