| |
---|---|
Frequency | 1400kHz |
Branding | Gospel 1400, The Light |
Programming | |
Format | Gospel music |
Ownership | |
Owner | Titus Harvest Dome Spectrum Church, Inc. |
History | |
First air date | July 4, 1950 |
Former call signs |
|
Technical information [1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 68761 |
Class | C |
Power | 1,000 watts |
Transmitter coordinates | 30°19′43″N81°41′42″W / 30.32861°N 81.69500°W |
Translator(s) | 98.7 W254CW (Jacksonville) |
Links | |
Public license information |
WZAZ (1400 AM) is a radio station in Jacksonville, Florida, which carries a gospel music format. It is owned by Titus Harvest Dome Spectrum Church, Inc. The station went on the air in 1950 and has spent most of its history serving the Black community in Jacksonville.
Bert Richmond and Harold Cohn applied to the Federal Communications Commission on July 8, 1946, for a new radio station to serve Jacksonville on 1400 kHz dependent on WMBR vacating the frequency. The commission granted the application on August 18, 1949. [2]
WRHC went on the air on July 4, 1950. [3] Cohn later was also part of an application consortium for television channel 12 in Jacksonville. [4] WRHC became one of Jacksonville's main Black radio stations. One on-air personality was Ken Knight, who hosted the "Knight Train" show and also served as station vice president; Knight was the first Black person to produce a TV show in the city. [5] Knight's departure for a competitor, WOBS, in 1970 created major issues for WRHC; he departed because of issues with management, taking with him multiple advertising accounts, and the Florida Black Front began picketing the station. Cohn, claiming threats toward advertisers and calling the Black Front's demands impractical, put the station on the market. [6] Cohn died the next year, and operation passed to his son, Harold S. Cohn II. [7]
In 1972, WRHC changed its call sign to WERD, branding as "The Good Word Station". [8] In 1979, the Cohns sold the station for $488,000 to Gilliam Communications, Inc., a Black-owned firm that also owned WLOK in Memphis, Tennessee. [9] Gilliam owned the station until the Cohns foreclosed on the mortgage in August 1983 and reacquired WERD in bankruptcy. [10]
After the foreclosure, WERD was sold to Pres-Jas Inc., owned by Mark Picus; Picus's father Lawrence had been the court-appointed receiver for the bankrupt station. [10] After the sale, WERD flipped from an urban contemporary format to urban adult contemporary, focusing on music of the 1950s and 1960s, under new WZAZ call letters. [11] WZAZ's personality format differentiated it from other AM stations and gave it for a short time a ratings boost; one DJ, Don Smith, was known as "The Pressure Cooker" and for such antics as playing a toilet flushing sound effect on the air. [12] In November 1985, Smith attempted to break the world record for radio broadcasting endurance only to fail more than 11 days in when two tubes in the WZAZ transmitter blew, disqualifying him from continuing. [13] However, WZAZ's ratings bump was short-lived, especially after contemporary hit station WAPE-FM emerged in 1986 and zoomed to a 20-percent audience share. Though a general-market station, WAPE-FM had a higher Black audience than WZAZ. [14] In 1988, investors threatened to change the format to country to increase earnings, leading manager Picus to start a petition campaign on air. [15]
Picus acquired a station at 92.7 MHz, then with the WPDQ call sign, in 1989; [16] the acquisition of the station, renamed WZAZ-FM, required a $1.85 million loan. After Citizens & Southern National Bank (C&S) declared the loan in default for a payment that was 15 days late, Picus and the Picus Broadcastng Corporation filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June 1990. [17] The station was sold the next year to UNC Media Group, sister to a firm that specialized in financing minority-owned communications companies. [18]
UNC Media sold the stations to Jacor in 1995 at a time when Jacor was assembling a cluster and expanding from two stations to five. [19] Jacor flipped WZAZ to gospel and was encouraged enough by the ratings increase, tripling in 18 months, to make a similar move in St. Louis. [20] When Jacor merged into Clear Channel Communications in 1999, it was required to put four stations into a divestiture trust. Two—WZNZ (1460 AM) and WBGB (106.5 FM)—were higher-priority and were sold off to Concord Media Group of Tampa. [21] [22] Though Concord later bought WZAZ and another station also being divested—WJGR (1320 AM)—Clear Channel sold the advertising for the Concord cluster and the stations operated from Clear Channel's studios, creating a cluster of 11 stations between the two companies. In November 2001, Ohio store owner David Ringer petitioned the FCC to examine the Clear Channel–Concord arrangement. [23]
The Concord stations were sold to Salem Communications in 2003. [24] They separated from the Clear Channel studios and sales staff to in-house operations on Jacksonville's Southside. [25] The company sold the FM station to Cox Radio in 2006 and immediately sold the AM stations to Chesapeake-Portsmouth Broadcasting Corporation in a $2.8 million transaction. [26] Chesapeake-Portsmouth agreed to sell WZAZ to the Titus Harvest Dome Spectrum Church in 2007 for $1.19 million. [27]
WJXX is a television station licensed to Orange Park, Florida, United States, serving the Jacksonville area as an affiliate of ABC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside NBC affiliate WTLV. The two stations share studios on East Adams Street in downtown Jacksonville; WJXX's transmitter is located on Anders Boulevard in the city's Killarney Shores section.
WTLV is a television station in Jacksonville, Florida, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Orange Park–licensed ABC affiliate WJXX, a combination known as First Coast News. The two stations share studios on East Adams Street in downtown Jacksonville; WTLV's transmitter is located on Anders Boulevard in the city's Killarney Shores section.
WFOX-TV is a television station in Jacksonville, Florida, United States, affiliated with Fox and Telemundo. It is owned by Cox Media Group, which provides certain services to CBS affiliate WJAX-TV under a joint sales agreement (JSA) with Hoffman Communications. The three stations share studios on Central Parkway; WFOX-TV's transmitter is located on Hogan Road, both in Jacksonville's Southside section.
WCPZ – branded Mix 102.7 – is a commercial hot adult contemporary radio station licensed to Sandusky, Ohio, serving Ohio's Vacationland region.
WBOB is a commercial AM radio station in Jacksonville, Florida. The station airs a talk radio format and is owned by Chesapeake-Portsmouth Broadcasting Corporation. Weekdays begin with a local news and information show, followed by mostly syndicated programming, including shows from Mark Levin, Mike Gallagher, Dennis Prager, Jay Sekulow and Red Eye Radio. Most hours begin with Townhall News. Some hours are paid brokered programming. The station calls itself "Talkradio AM 600 & FM 101.1 WBOB".
WERD was the first radio station owned and programmed by African Americans. The station was established in Atlanta, Georgia on October 3, 1949, broadcasting on 860 AM. The National Black Radio Hall of Fame Atlanta Chapter is reopening WERD which still exists at its birth location and will also include a historical museum with it after renovations of the facility are completed.
WWHT is a radio station that is licensed to Syracuse, New York. The station is owned by iHeartMedia and broadcasts a contemporary hit radio (CHR) format. The studios and offices are located on Plum Street in Syracuse while its transmitter is located near Sentinel Heights south of Syracuse.
WOKV is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Jacksonville, Florida, United States. WOKV is owned by Cox Media Group and broadcasts a sports format from studios in Jacksonville's Southside district and transmitters in Orange Park and Baldwin.
WKST is a commercial AM radio station in New Castle, Pennsylvania, serving Lawrence County. It has a classic hits format and is owned by Seven Mountains Media of State College, Pennsylvania, through licensee Southern Belle Media Family, LLC, which also owns 34 other radio stations in Pennsylvania including WUZZ (AM) in New Castle and WYLE (FM) in Grove City.
WFLZ-FM is a commercial radio station in Tampa, Florida. It airs a contemporary hit radio radio format and is owned and operated by iHeartMedia. The station's studios and offices are located on Gandy Boulevard in South Tampa. Local DJs are heard on weekdays, with syndicated shows, including American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest, the iHeartRadio Countdown, the Remix Top 30 with Hollywood Hamilton and On The Move with Enrique Santos, heard on weekends.
WQOP is a radio station licensed to serve Jacksonville, Florida. The station is owned by Relevant Radio, Inc., and broadcasts a Catholic radio format.
WJBT is a commercial radio station licensed to Callahan, Florida, and serving the Jacksonville metropolitan area. It airs a mainstream urban radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The studios and offices are on Central Parkway in the Southside neighborhood.
WJXL-FM is a commercial radio station licensed to Jacksonville Beach, Florida, and serving the Jacksonville metropolitan area. WJXL-FM is owned by River City Broadcasting, LLC.
WJXL is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Jacksonville Beach, Florida, and serving the Jacksonville metropolitan area. WJXL is owned by Seven Bridges Radio, LLC.
WSOL-FM is a commercial radio station known as V101.5. It is licensed to Yulee, Florida, and serves the Jacksonville metropolitan area and Southeast Georgia. Owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc., it broadcasts an Urban Adult Contemporary radio format. WSOL-FM's studios are located on Central Parkway in Jacksonville's Southside district. The transmitter is off McKendree Road in Kingsland, Georgia, a couple of miles from the Georgia-Florida border.
WKQQ is a radio station licensed to the city of Winchester, Kentucky, serving Lexington and the greater Central Kentucky area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia and airs a classic rock format.
WQIK-FM is a commercial radio station in Jacksonville, Florida. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc., and airs a country radio format. Overnight, WQIK carries the syndicated CMA After Midnite Show with Cody Alan and the Bobby Bones Show on Sunday evenings. WQIK-FM is unusual in the radio industry as a station that has kept its original call sign and format for more than half a century.
WBHU is a radio station broadcasting an adult hits format. Previously, it aired an oldies music format as part of the True Oldies Channel network. Other previous formats included hot country, rhythmic oldies and smooth jazz.
WZNZ – branded Relevant Radio – is a non-commercial Catholic radio station licensed to Atlantic Beach, Florida. Owned by Relevant Radio, Inc., the station serves the Jacksonville metropolitan area but does not broadcast any local programming, instead functioning as a repeater for Relevant Radio's English language radio network. The WZNZ transmitter is located in Atlantic Beach.
WHJX is an FM radio station owned by Cox Media Group. It is licensed to Jacksonville, Florida, and serves the Jacksonville metropolitan area with an urban adult contemporary format. It brands as "Hot 106.5" and was previously heard on WOKV-HD2 and translator W258CN as "Hot 99.5".