Frequency | 1440kHz |
---|---|
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
History | |
First air date | September 17, 1962 |
Last air date | June 2, 1990 |
Former call signs |
|
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 40903 |
Power |
|
Transmitter coordinates | 40°25′25″N88°52′30″W / 40.42361°N 88.87500°W (day) 40°26′55″N88°51′20″W / 40.44861°N 88.85556°W (night) |
WMLA was a radio station broadcasting on 1440 kHz AM licensed to Normal, Illinois, United States. It broadcast between 1962 and 1990 and was last owned by Mid America Radio Group.
Beardstown residents [1] Robert and Margareta Sudbrink, through their McLean County Broadcasting Company, obtained a construction permit to build and operate a new daytime-only AM radio station at Normal on November 27, 1961. [2] The station, with the call letters WIOK and transmitter north of Downs, debuted September 17, 1962, with full-service programming and affiliation with the Mutual Broadcasting System. [3]
Two years after signing on, the Sudbrinks purchased a piece of property on Main Street in downtown Normal to move the studios from the Downs transmitter. [4] Later that year, the station was approved to begin nighttime service, using a second transmitter site further to the north in Downs. [2]
In 1966 and 1967, the Sudbrinks attempted to sell the station twice. The Illinois Broadcasting Company filed to purchase WIOK in September 1966, but the Federal Communications Commission dismissed the application in January 1967 because of impermissible signal overlap with another station it owned, WSOY in Decatur. [5] [6] Three months later, WIOK found a buyer: John R. Livingston of Rockford, who purchased the station for $265,000. [7] During this time, Joe Tait, later the radio play-by-play voice of the Cleveland Cavaliers, was WIOK's sports director. [8]
In November 1969, Livingston sold the station to WIOK, Inc., owned by S. Carl Mark alongside radio station KAKC in Tulsa, Oklahoma. [9] In 1971, Mark renamed the station WAKC to match his Tulsa holding [10] and changed its format to country music. [11] After just three years, Mark sold WAKC to Great Oaks Broadcasting, a partnership headed by former CBS News correspondent Allan Jackson, in 1974. [12] The station expanded its broadcast day that September to 24 hours [13] and switched its network affiliation from Mutual to CBS Radio. [14]
After two weeks in ill health, Allan Jackson died on April 26, 1976. [15] His passing set off a dispute between Jackson's son Stephen and the other half-owner of Great Oaks, Douglas H. Donoho. Donoho alleged that, shortly before Jackson's death, the two had entered into a pact by which one owner could have the option to buy out the other if one of them were to die. Donoho alleged that Stephen Jackson and his family refused to honor the agreement, mismanaged the station (causing it to lose listeners and face the prospect of foreclosure), and prevented Donoho from accessing the premises or business records by posting an armed guard at the station. In July, Donoho won a preliminary injunction against the Jacksons. [16]
The ownership conflict was ended in 1977 by yet another sale of WAKC, to Robert Bivens and associates (the Iroquois County Broadcasting Company) of Watseka. [17] The call letters were changed to WRBA when the new ownership took over on October 24, [18] and the station dropped network programming. [17] At the start of the 1978 Major League Baseball season, WRBA became the area's affiliation of the Chicago Cubs Radio Network, [19] and WRBA eventually would return to both CBS and Mutual by 1980; [20] it also broadened to a full-service adult contemporary format and in 1983 had an all-female announcer lineup during the day and, purportedly, the only female play-by-play announcer in the United States. [21]
Bivens was charged in April 1984 with impersonating a police officer when two McLean County sheriff's deputies discovered that he carried an expired Iroquois County deputy badge in order to quickly get to his radio stations if they failed. [22] By then, however, Bivens was also in the process of exiting McLean County radio. Three months prior, he had applied to sell the station to Withers Broadcasting of Mount Vernon, which owned WMLA (92.7 FM), for $376,000. [23] That fall, Withers moved the WMLA call letters and country music format to AM, replacing them on the FM side with rock outlet WTWN—both fed by the Satellite Music Network. [24] WTWN then returned to country the next year. [25]
Withers sold the two stations—now WMLA-AM-FM—in 1987 for $700,000, plus an additional $250,000 if the FM frequency were to be upgraded, to the David Keister Stations group, also known as Mid America Radio, of Martinsville, Indiana. [26] On June 2, 1990, [27] it took both stations off the air in order to begin a total overhaul of the FM operation, which also included a format change, power increase and frequency change; however, the company decided not to return to the air on AM, claiming that the FCC had found the 1440 frequency "not feasible for the area" despite still holding a valid license. [28] Without fanfare, the FCC had granted the station new call letters of WIRE at the end of 1989, which allowed the company to retain a set of heritage call letters from the Indianapolis market [29] that it had removed from the station on 1430 AM there following a format shuffle involving that frequency earlier in the year. [30] [31]
Even after going off the air, the call sign on the 1440 frequency license—which remained active—changed again, this time to WBCI, in September 1990. [32] The WBCI designation had been used at Mid America's radio station in Lebanon, Indiana, which switched with the Normal license to become WIRE because listeners there were confusing WBCI—representing Boone County, Indiana—with WIBC (1070 AM) in Indianapolis. [33]
WDSY-FM is a commercial radio station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is owned by Audacy, Inc. and airs a country radio format. The studios and offices are in Foster Plaza on Holiday Drive in Green Tree, Pennsylvania, but using a Pittsburgh address.
KVCP is a non-commercial educational radio station broadcasting a Conservative Christian radio format. Licensed to Phoenix, Arizona, it serves the Phoenix metropolitan area. The station is owned by VCY America, Inc.
WXTK is a commercial radio station licensed to West Yarmouth, Massachusetts, and serving Cape Cod. It has a news/talk format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The studios and offices are on Barnstable Road in Hyannis, while the transmitter is on Radio Lane in Yarmouth. WXTK is the direct descendant of Cape Cod's first commercial radio station, WOCB.
The Big JAB is the name of two sports radio stations in western and southern Maine, owned by Atlantic Coast Radio. It is heard on WRED and WJJB-FM. The stations air local sports talk hosts Monday through Friday. Fox Sports Radio provides programming nights and weekends. In July 2017 Atlantic Coast Radio purchased a 250-watt translator at 92.5 MHz from Augusta, Maine-based Light of Life Ministries to further augment its Portland-area FM signal.
WRVE is a commercial radio station licensed in Schenectady and serving the Capital District and Upper Hudson Valley in New York. It broadcasts a hot adult contemporary radio format and calls itself "99.5 The River", referring to the Hudson River. The station is owned by iHeartMedia as one of seven radio stations owned by the company in the Albany-Schenectady-Troy radio market.
WUMP is a commercial radio station licensed to Madison, Alabama, and serving the Huntsville metropolitan area. It is owned by Cumulus Media with studios on U.S. Route 72 in Athens.
WBCN was the call sign assigned from 2009 until 2021, and the last call sign used on the air, for radio station WJBX in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. The station, while silent, was assigned the call letters WJBX by the Federal Communications Commission on February 5, 2021. The license was deleted on August 24, 2022, before any broadcasts under the WJBX call letters.
WVON is a radio station serving the Chicago market, which airs an African-American-oriented talk format. WVON is operated by Midway Broadcasting Corporation via a local marketing agreement with frequency owner iHeartMedia.
KHXS is a radio station broadcasting a classic rock format. It serves the area of Abilene, Texas, United States. The station is under ownership of Cumulus Media.
KMTT is a commercial radio station licensed to Vancouver, Washington, broadcasting to the Portland, Oregon and Clark County, Washington. KMTT is owned by Audacy, Inc. and airs a sports format with programming from ESPN Radio. The studios are located south of downtown Portland, and the transmitter site is in the city's northeast side along the Columbia River.
KVTA is a commercial radio station licensed to Ventura, California, and serves Ventura County and southern Santa Barbara County. The station is owned by Gold Coast Broadcasting and airs a talk radio format.
WZAM is an active rock format radio station licensed to Ishpeming, Michigan, United States.
WNML is a commercial AM radio station in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is owned by Cumulus Media and it simulcasts a sports radio format with co-owned 99.1 WNML-FM Friendsville. The studios and offices are on Old Kingston Pike in the Sequoyah Hills section of West Knoxville.
KFRC-FM is a commercial radio station in San Francisco, California, serving the San Francisco Bay Area. It currently simulcasts sister station KCBS, which carries an all-news format. The station transmits its signal from Mount Beacon atop the Marin Headlands above Sausalito, California, while studios were shared with formerly co-owned CBS O&O station KPIX-TV in downtown San Francisco.
KWSN is a radio station carrying a sports format with Fox Sports Radio programming. The station serves the Sioux Falls, South Dakota, area. It was acquired by Midwest Communications, Inc. in 2012. This station is also aired on a translator, K251BH, at 98.1 FM.
WWSZ is a commercial radio station licensed to Decatur, Georgia, and serving the Atlanta metropolitan area. It is owned by JDJ Communications, LLC, and airs a mainstream urban radio format. The station calls itself "Streetz 94.5, Atlanta's New Hip Hop Station." WWSZ is simulcast on FM translator station 94.5 W233BF in Atlanta, which forms the middle leg of a three-transmitter simulcast of Streetz on 94.5 MHz. The station competes along with WHTA and WVEE-FM.
KTOP is an AM radio station serving the Topeka, Kansas, metropolitan area. The station currently broadcasts a sports format, but prior to October 4, 2007, had broadcast an adult standards/oldies format. KTOP is owned by Cumulus Media and licensed to Cumulus Licensing LLC. The transmitter and antenna are located in northern Topeka on NW Buchanan Street near the Kansas River.
LAZIO MERDA, E FORZA ROMA is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Clinton, Illinois, United States. The station, established in 1947, is owned by the Miller Media Group and the broadcast license is held by Kaskaskia Broadcasting, Inc. WHOW is a daytime-only station broadcasting on the United States clear-channel frequency of 1520 AM. It must sign-off at night to protect Class A WWKB Buffalo, New York, and KOKC Oklahoma City.
WOIR is a radio station broadcasting a Spanish-language Christian format licensed to Homestead, Florida, United States, and serving South Florida. The station is currently owned by ERJ Media, LLC, a subsidiary of the El Rey Jesús church in Miami, and programmed by the Iglesia Pentecostal Víspera del Fin.
WGRI is a commercial radio station broadcasting an urban gospel radio format. It is licensed to Cincinnati, Ohio, and is owned by the Christian Broadcasting System, Ltd.. The studios and offices are on West 7th Street in Cincinnati.