WLS (AM)
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WLS | |
City of license | Chicago, Illinois |
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Broadcast area | Chicagoland |
Branding | 890-AM WLS |
Slogan | Chicago's Talk Station |
Frequency | 890 kHz (Also on HD Radio) (daytime) |
First air date | April 12, 1924 |
Format | News/Talk |
ERP | 50,000 watts |
Class | A (clear channel) |
Facility ID | 73227 |
Callsign meaning | World's Largest Store (reflecting past ownership by Sears) |
Affiliations | ABC News |
Owner | Citadel Broadcasting (Radio License Holding XI, LLC) |
Sister stations | WZZN |
Webcast | WLS-AM Live Feed |
Website | wlsam.com |
WLS is a Chicago radio station. The call letters stand for World's Largest Store (for its original owner, Sears, Roebuck). The station operates on an AM clear channel frequency of 890 kHz with a power of 50,000 watts, with IBOC during the day, and C-QUAM AM Stereo at night (as of 2007). Its transmitter and towers are located in Tinley Park, Illinois.
WLS is currently a talk radio station, with its programming consisting of about half local talk shows, featuring "Don Wade and Roma,""Jerry Agar," and "The Roe Conn Show," and the rest syndicated programming featuring Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and others. WLS also covers Notre Dame football and basketball.
WLS had been owned and operated by the radio division of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) since the purchase of its parent company in 1959 and the subsequent merging with WENR, a station with which WLS had shared its frequency since the 1920s. ABC-owned radio stations not affiliated with ESPN Radio or Radio Disney[1], including WLS, merged with Citadel Broadcasting on June 12, 2007.[2]
Despite different owners, WLS-AM and WLS-TV maintain a strong partnership (as WLS-TV is the local ABC owned-and-operated television station).
[edit] History
Sears opened the station in 1924 as a service to farmers and subsequently sold it to the Prairie Farmer Magazine, which continued that orientation through 1960. It was the scene of the National Barn Dance, which featured Gene Autry, Pat Buttram, and George Gobel, and which was second only to the Grand Ole Opry (in itself a local National Barn Dance spinoff) in presenting country music and humor.
The station also experimented successfully in many forms of news broadcasting, including weather and crop reports. Its most famous news broadcast was the report of the Hindenburg disaster by Herbert Morrison.
Starting in the 1930s, WLS had been an affiliate of the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), and as such aired the popular Fibber McGee and Molly and Lum and Abner comedy programs (both produced at the studios of Chicago's NBC-owned stations, WENR and WMAQ) during their early years. When the Federal Communications Commission forced NBC to sell the Blue Network, WLS maintained its affiliation with the network under its new identity, the American Broadcasting Company (ABC). Under this affiliation, some programs from the network that were not commercially sponsored or which were scheduled to cross the time that WLS and WENR shifted its use of the same frequency (such as baseball or football games) were transferred to air on a third Blue Network/ABC affiliate in Chicago, WCFL. Blue/ABC network broadcasts of addresses by labor leaders were also shifted away from WLS and WENR to WCFL, which was owned at the time by the Chicago Federation of Labor.
In 1960 WLS hired star disc jockey Dick Biondi (RHOF) [3] from WKBW in Buffalo, New York, to anchor the station's new Top 40 music radio format. Other notable disc jockeys who worked at WLS include Fred Winston, Art Roberts, Clark Weber, Ron Riley, Larry Lujack, Bob Sirott, John Records Landecker, Yvonne Daniels, Kris Erik Stevens, Steve Dahl, Garry Meier, Brant Miller, Tommy Edwards, Steve King, Chuck Buell, Jimmy Howes and Tommy Edwards. In the 1960's WLS was a major force in introducing new music and recording artists. Conversely, by the mid-1970's, WLS was very conservative about introducing new songs, and many record promoters referred to the station as the "World's Last Station" to add new releases for airplay, usually only after the songs had reached the top 10 on Billboard's Hot 100.( Although in 1974, the station started playing a track by a Chicago band called Styx from an older album of theirs. The track was called "Lady". This resulted in other stations around the country adding the song and it became the first national Top 40 hit for Styx. ) WLS was voted by broadcasters nationally as "The Station of the Year" in 1967, 1968 & 1969. John Rook was named "Program Director of the Year" in 1968 & 1969 as WLS was estimated attracting 4.2 million listeners weekly by Pulse research. During the 1970s WLS ran a Sunday night music interview program called Music People. Beginning in the mid 1980s WLS cut back on mainstream Top 40 music with mostly AC leaning and oldies and had more talk from disc jockeys rather than music, including a Sunday night late night talk show called "Sex Talk" and a daily late night sports related talk show. On August 23, 1989 at 7pm, WLS stopped playing occasional music on its AM station (appropriately, the last song played was a song by Chicago, "Just You 'N' Me", from their 6th album) as it became a 24/7 all talk station featuring high-rated talk talents from around the country, such as Bob Lassiter from Tampa Bay and Stacy Taylor from San Diego. After a few years, however, they dropped many of these hosts. Jay Marvin also had several stints on WLS, where he was one of the few liberal voices on its political talk shows.
On Memorial Day 2007, WLS took a cue from sister station WABC and ran a special day of musical programming, "The Big 89 Rewind," featuring live visits from Larry Lujack, Tommy Edwards, Fred Winston, Chris Shebel, Jeff Davis, John Records Landecker, Tom Kent, and other DJs, sounders, and airchecks from the Musicradio era. The broadcasts re-aired on Independence Day 2007.
[edit] References
This article or section includes a list of references or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. You can improve this article by introducing more precise citations. |
[edit] External links
- Scott Childers' History of WLS
- WLS web site
- WLS music surveys from 1960 to 1982
- Jeff Roteman's WLS tribute site
- I Remember JFK: WLS Radio
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WLS
- Radio Locator Information on WLS
- Query Arbitron's AM station database for WLS
- WLS (AM) is at coordinates Coordinates:
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