WOZN (AM)
City of license | Madison, Wisconsin |
---|---|
Branding | 106.7FM/1670AM The Zone |
Slogan | "Madison's Sports Talk Station" |
Frequency | 1670 (kHz) AM |
Repeaters | WOZN-FM (106.7 MHz FM) (simulcast) |
First air date | 1948 |
Format | Sports talk |
Power |
10,000 watts Day 1,000 watts Night |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 87154 |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°01′31.00″N 89°23′46.00″W / 43.0252778°N 89.3961111°W |
Callsign meaning | From the "ZONe" branding |
Former callsigns |
WISM (until 11/26/1984) WTDY (1984-2012) |
Former frequencies | 1480 (kHz) AM (until 1998; simulcast w/ 1670 AM, 1998-2002) |
Affiliations | CBS Sports Radio |
Owner |
Mid-West Family Broadcasting (Mid-West Management, Inc.) |
Sister stations | WHIT, WJJO, WJQM, WLMV, WMGN, WOZN-FM, WWQM |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | MadCitySportsZone.com |
WOZN ("The Zone") is a sports talk radio station licensed to and serving Madison, Wisconsin. Owned and operated by Mid-West Family Broadcasting, WOZN broadcasts on 1670 AM, and is also simulcast on WOZN-FM (106.7), which is licensed to Mount Horeb and whose signal covers Western portions of Dane County, Wisconsin.
History
The station began operating in 1948 at the 1480 AM frequency under the call letters WISC, which were eventually changed to WISM. For years, WISM was the popular Top 40 radio station in Madison and was the first station in Wisconsin to broadcast in AM stereo in the early 1980s ("Both Sides Now" by Judy Collins was the first song WISM played in AM Stereo). In 1984, the WTDY call letters were adopted, which originally stood for "Today Radio," a format that featured a mix of music, news, sports and weather, with the station eventually moving to a full news/talk format. WTDY would relocate to the 1670 AM frequency in 2002, and would add an FM simulcast, at 106.7, by the end of 2011 (see below), a simulcast that continues today as WOZN and WOZN-FM.
In addition to "Sly," WTDY's schedule by 2012 included local show Forward with Kurt Baron; full hours of local news at 12PM and 5PM; national shows including Michael Smerconish and America's Radio News; and weekend broadcasts of NFL and college sports from Compass Media Networks and Sports USA.
On November 21, 2012, Mid-West Family Broadcasting management conducted layoffs at WTDY, with "Sly" Sylvester let go along with the station's entire news staff (program director and Forward host Kurt Baron was retained in another capacity); later that day, news/talk programming on both WTDY and WTDY-FM was replaced by automated Christmas music.[3][2][4][5] The Christmas stunting lasted until the weekend of December 29, 2012 in favor of a two-song loop of "Wherever I May Roam" by Metallica and "Welcome to the Jungle" by Guns N Roses.[6] The loop ended at 11AM on January 2, 2013, when both 1670 AM and 106.7 FM (respectively identifying as WOZN and WOZN-FM) unveiled a sports talk format branded as "The Zone," launching with the CBS Sports Radio debut of The Jim Rome Show ("Welcome to the Jungle" is its opening theme).[7]
"The Zone's" schedule relies mainly on programming from CBS Sports Radio, including The Jim Rome Show. Local and state content on the station includes the call-in show "Snuff and the Benchwarmers" (6-8AM); "The Bill Michaels Show" (3-7PM), which originates from Milwaukee's WSSP;[8] and "Wisconsin Farm Report with Pam Jahnke" (5-6AM), a statewide farm markets program that is the only holdover from WTDY's news/talk schedule.
Broadcasting Information
WTDY, as noted above, was originally at the 1480 AM frequency. In June 1998, the station moved to the 1670 (Extended AM) frequency, though a simulcast on 1480 (which became WTDA) continued until 2002, when WTDY moved solely to 1670 and 1480 became the Spanish language-formatted WLMV.
On December 13, 2011, WTDY began a simulcast on 106.7 FM, its sister station licensed to Mount Horeb, Wisconsin, which before that date simulcast the country music format of WWQM-FM (and changed call sign from WWQN to WTDY-FM at that time; the station is currently WOZN-FM). Though the 106.7 FM signal only meets the fringes of Madison (its signal strength covers Western Dane County and Iowa County), the move gave WTDY (and now WOZN) a presence on the clearer FM radio band and continued a trend in recent years of spoken word formats (news, talk, or sports) moving to or simulcasting on FM signals.
WOZN originates from its Madison, WI, studios at 730 Ray-O-Vac Dr. on the far west side of Madison. Its single tower is located on Syene Rd. in the nearby Town of Madison, sharing a site with WLMV. The station's 1670 AM signal transmits on a non-directional antenna with daytime transmitting power of 10,000 watts reduced to 1,000 watts at sunset.
See also
References
- ↑ Source: WTDY station website, c. 1997 (via archive.org)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Staff report (21 November 2012). "Sly, WTDY news staff react to their layoffs by Midwest Family Broadcasting". Isthmus. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Radio personality Sly, others out of work at WTDY," from Wisconsin State Journal, 11/22/2012
- ↑ Staff report (21 November 2012). "WTDY cuts news staff, including Sly". WISC-TV. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
- ↑ "WTDY Madison Dismisses Staff; Flips to Christmas," from Radio Insight, originally posted 11/21/2012 and updated 11/30/2012
- ↑ Source: Twitter.com/RadioInsight (12/29/2012 message)
- ↑ "Format Changes". Your Midwest Media. 2 January 2013.
- ↑ "WSSP/Milwaukee's Bill Michaels Adds WOZN To Statewide Network As Show Turns 2," from All Access, 7/29/2013
External links
- WOZN/WOZN-FM website
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WOZN
- Radio-Locator Information on WOZN
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WOZN
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