Broadcast area | Butler County, Kentucky Morgantown, Kentucky Beaver Dam, Kentucky Bowling Green |
---|---|
Frequency | 1570 kHz |
Branding | Beech Tree Radio The Q: 103.5 North, 101.5 South(for W278DA and W268CE) |
Programming | |
Format | Full service (Featuring Classic hits) |
Affiliations | Kentucky News Network ABC News Radio |
Ownership | |
Owner | Beech Tree Publishing |
History | |
First air date | August 9, 1976(on AM 1570) August 21, 2014 (on FM 101.5) December 26, 2018(on FM 103.5) |
Call sign meaning | W Lincoln Broadcasting Q (derived from a previous owner) |
Technical information [1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 7904 |
Class | AM & FM: D |
Power | AM: 1,000 watts day 150 watts night |
ERP | FM: 250 watts |
Transmitter coordinates | 37°13′9″N86°41′21″W / 37.21917°N 86.68917°W |
Translator(s) | 101.5 W268CE (Morgantown) [2] 103.5 W278DA (Caneyville) |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | wlbq1015.com beechtreenews.com |
WLBQ (1570 AM), known locally on air as "BeechTree Radio," or simply as "The Q", is a radio station broadcasting a Classic Hits format. Licensed to and located in Morgantown, Kentucky, United States, the station is currently owned by Beech Tree Publishing. The station's transmitter is located along South Main Street (US 231/KY 79), [3] [4] and the studios are located at 107 West Ohio Street in downtown Morgantown.
WLBQ's construction permit was granted by the FCC on November 13, 1975, with the call letters assigned on March 1, 1976. [5] The station first signed on the air on August 9, 1976, when it became fully licensed. [5] [6] The station's studios were originally located at the corner of Logan and Tyler Streets in Morgantown. [5] Its original owner was Joseph W. Meyers, doing business as Lincoln Broadcasting, based in Hodgenville, Kentucky. [5] The station was operated under the licensee name of Lincoln Broadcasting. The station's license was sold to Butler County Broadcasting in December 1977; the sale was finalized in early 1978. [5] [7] In June 1979, Myers sold the station and the stock in Butler County Broadcasting to the late Charles T. Black, [5] who at the time was also serving as mayor of Morgantown and, until 1985, director of the Butler County High School marching band. [8] He, along with his wife Mary Alice, assumed management of the station in October 1979; [5] [9] they, with some assistance from their son, Mark, managed the station for almost three decades. [10]
In June 1983, WLBQ was granted permission to increase its daytime signal power to its current 1,000 watts. [11]
Butler County Broadcasting was renamed BeechTree Publishing sometime in the late 2000s, hence the previous branding that was used by the station until 2015.
For most of its first 38 years on the air, WLBQ was one of only three radio stations in Kentucky to not have a co-owned FM sister station; the other two were WEKT in Elkton and WFKN in Franklin. [10] This changed on May 20, 2014, when WLBQ was granted a construction permit for a new FM translator, W268CE, licensed to Morgantown, broadcasting at 101.5 on the FM dial, operating on 250 watts of effective radiated power, transmitting from a tower along KY 70 (Veterans Way) near the Charles Black City Park in Morgantown. [2] [12] [13] [14] The new translator, which was purchased from Bethel Fellowship in June 2014 and relocated from nearby Beaver Dam, [14] signed on the air on the morning of August 21, 2014 during WLBQ's morning program, Out On A Limb, thus ending the station's lack of FM companionship. After the FM translator began simulcasting the AM signal, by September 2014, the station began branding by their FM frequency as Q 101.5. After launching their FM translator, the station now occasionally competes with WKYY (a translator of Brownsville-licensed WKLX) and oldies station WXMZ in nearby Hartford, in neighboring Ohio County.
In Fall 2015, WLBQ, in conjunction with the Butler County High School, began the Broadcasting and Media Class at the high school, providing high school students an opportunity to learn the behind-the-scenes work in the radio industry. The class included how to write for radio, including commercials, promos, and newscasts. That class took part in WLBQ's broadcast of senior night activities during a BCHS basketball broadcast, including pre- and post-game programming, and color analogy during the game. [15]
In December 2018, in order to broaden its FM coverage, WLBQ launched a second low-power translator, W278DA, broadcasting at 103.5 megahertz. Although it is licensed to Caneyville, in neighboring Grayson County, W278DA's transmission tower is located at the junction of State Highway 79 and Brooklyn Road (KY 340) south of Welchs Creek, in the northeastern portion of Butler County. [16] [17]
WLBQ's news department is Butler County's only news source without stories from other areas. Their news department uses the moniker "Beech Tree News."
Out On a Limb is the local radio show that focuses on current issues and public affairs in Butler County. The show is hosted by John Embry, and is broadcast on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at 7:00 am, with replays at 10:00 am and 7:00 pm. [18] [19] In the mid-2010s, the program had a spinoff show, The Leadership Limb, a "leadership edition" of Out on A Limb. It was broadcast on Wednesdays at 7 a.m., with same replay times, with Jim Green and Landon Hampton hosting.
Prior to 2014, the local newscasts at 12 noon and 4 p.m. every day consisted of these segments in broadcast order: Local news, obituaries, local sports, community news, swap shop, and weather. WLBQ also broadcast statewide news updates from the Kentucky News Network, a statewide network that brings news headlines from across Kentucky. On Sundays, WLBQ also broadcast locally based religious radio shows, including broadcasts of worship services from local churches. [20] The newscasts have since shortened to 5 to 10 minutes long, including local and state news and obituaries.
As of 2015, the station broadcasts a full-service format with local news, and the station plays music from four genres of music, including Classic Top 40, Hot Adult Contemporary, Classic Country, and Classic Rock; most songs played on the station were released no later than 1999, with a few exceptions. In addition to its music, news and public affairs programming, WLBQ is the exclusive radio home of sporting events involving the teams of Butler County High School, home of the Butler County Bears. Sporting Events include football, boys and girls basketball, baseball, and softball. Most of the station's broadcasts of Butler County Bears football and basketball games are also accompanied with live video coverage of the games through the station's Facebook page via Facebook Live. Prior to 2021, additional sports-related content was provided by the Kentucky News Network's sports division. From around 1994 [21] until 2005, the station also broadcast Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football and basketball game coverage from the Hilltoppers Sports Radio Network.
On Sunday mornings from 6 a.m. to 12 Noon Central time, the station also broadcasts church services by various churches in the area.
In December 2015, WLBQ began providing hourly national news updates from ABC News Radio. In 2024, the station began airing Americana Country, a weekly syndicated program centered on bluegrass music, on Sunday afternoons.
The following is a list of locally produced programs broadcast by WLBQ outside of music programming:
WLBQ Beech Tree Radio also offers ads to local businesses in Butler and surrounding counties. Business owners can contact the station by phone or email to place an ad to attract customers. Listeners of the station can also place an ad to be displayed on the web site and in the "Swap Shop" segment of the 12 noon local news that is broadcast every day (including weekends). [23]
WLBQ's AM signal covers mainly the Butler County, Kentucky area during the night hours. During the daytime hours, when the signal consumes more power, its signal would cover the same areas as at night, but also reach parts of, if not all, of nearby sections of neighboring counties, like Edmonson, Grayson, Logan, Muhlenberg, Ohio, and Warren counties. Under the right conditions during the daytime, the signal may also reach northern Todd County, and parts of Simpson County. [26] But for best quality when listening to this station, listeners can listen online at the station's website.
In addition to the main station at 1570 on the AM dial, WLBQ is relayed by an additional translator on the FM dial to widen its broadcast area and to provide a better quality radio signal to listeners within the regular WLBQ coverage area.
Call sign | Frequency | City of license | FID | ERP (W) | Class | FCC info |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W268CE | 101.5 FM | Morgantown, Kentucky | 145164 | 250 | D | LMS |
W278DA | 103.5 FM | Caneyville, Kentucky | 200578 | 250 | D | LMS |
The station management is also in charge of a local online news website, BeechTree News. As an alternative to the county's printed newspaper, it was established in 2009 to provide much local news information, along with select news stories from the rest of the state to its online users.
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