WNSR
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WNSR | |
City of license | Brentwood, Tennessee |
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Broadcast area | Nashville, Tennessee |
Branding | SportsRadio |
Frequency | 560 kHz |
Format | Sports radio, Talk radio |
Power | 4500 Watts (daytime) 75 Watts (nighttime) |
Class | Class D |
Callsign meaning | Nashville's SportsRadio |
Owner | Southern Wabash Communications of Middle Tennessee, Inc. |
Webcast | stream.wnsr.com |
Website | www.wnsr.com |
WNSR is a Nashville-area Class D radio station operating on the AM frequency of 560 kHz. WNSR's majority owner is Randolph Victor Bell, and the station's general manager is former WSM personality Ted Johnson.
WNSR converted to its current format in the mid-1990s, when all-sports programming began its meteoric rise in the North American radio market, particularly on AM stations. It was previously affiliated with ESPN Radio; however, in 2005, ESPN moved its affiliation to WNFN (then WNPL), an FM station. The switch is currently being litigated.
WNSR broadcasts a mixture of local and national sports events and local and national sports talk shows. It serves as the "backup" affiliate of the Nashville Predators NHL team, originating their games when the primary affiliate, WGFX-FM, has a conflicting commitment to the Vanderbilt University sports network.
WNSR is licensed to the Nashville suburb of Brentwood, Tennessee in adjoining Williamson County. Its 4,500-watt daytime signal is transmitted from a four-tower antenna in eastern Williamson County in a north-northeast/south-southeast directional pattern; this is due in part to the 5,000-watt daytime signal of a much older Class B 560 kHz station, WHBQ, just under 200 airline miles away in Memphis. As a result, WNSR's signal can be very difficult to receive in Nashville's eastern and especially western suburbs, but the station can be heard clearly from as far away as South Central Kentucky and North Alabama between sunrise and sunset. At night, when WHBQ has a 1,000-watt signal, WNSR broadcasts at an even more limited level of power (75 watts) from a nondirectional, one-tower antenna just southeast of downtown Nashville. Thus, the station's nighttime signal does not fully encompass the entire metropolitan area.
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