WLAM
WLAM logo | |
City of license | Lewiston, Maine |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Lewiston-Auburn area |
Branding | The Oldies Channel |
Frequency | 1470 kHz |
First air date | September 4, 1947 |
Format | Oldies, talk, sports |
Power | 5,000 watts unlimited |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 64434 |
Transmitter coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Callsign meaning | Lewiston Auburn Maine |
Former callsigns | WLAM (1947–1990) WKZN (1990–1993) WZOU (1993–2001) |
Affiliations | The True Oldies Channel (Cumulus), WCSH |
Owner | Binnie Media (sale to Bob Bittner pending) (WBIN Media Co., Inc.) |
Sister stations | WBQQ, WFNK, WHXR, WLVP, WTHT |
WLAM (1470 AM) is a radio station broadcasting oldies, news/talk, and sports programming. Licensed to Lewiston, Maine, USA, the station serves the Lewiston-Auburn area. Established in 1947, the station is currently owned by Binnie Media and simulcasts with WLVP (870 AM).
History
WLAM first went on the air September 4, 1947.[1] The station initially aired various programs, including ABC Radio programming, music, and local sports coverage.[2] An FM sister station on 100.1, WWAV (now WTHT on 99.9) was launched in 1977. The station became WKZN on December 26, 1990,[3] swapping call letters with its sister station in Gorham on 870;[4] the two stations eventually began simulcasting a standards format.[5] On July 19, 1993, WKZN changed its call sign to WZOU.[3]
Wireless Talking Machine Company sold WZOU, WLAM, and WLAM-FM (106.7 FM, which had launched in 1996 as an FM simulcast of the stations;[5] it is now WXTP), along with 99.9 (by then WMWX) and WTHT (107.5 FM; now WFNK) to Harron Communications, then-owner of WMTW-TV, in 1999.[6] On May 21, 2001, Harron restored the WLAM call letters to the station;[3] two weeks prior to this, 870 and 106.7 were converted to news/talk as WMTW.[7] While WLAM initially retained the standards format, on November 26, the station was switched to a simulcast of WMTW;[8] shortly afterwards, talk programming was removed from the stations in favor of an all-news format, mainly from the Associated Press's All-News Radio service.[9]
After Harron sold its Maine radio stations to Nassau Broadcasting Partners in 2004, Newsradio WMTW was discontinued. Nassau also introduced three separate formats to the stations,[10] with WLAM reverting to standards.[11] This incarnation of the format would prove short-lived; in late 2005, the station switched to ESPN Radio.[12]
One of WLAM's personalities during its standards incarnations was Bud Sawyer, a longtime staple of Portland-area radio stations such as WPOR, who was the station's morning host from 1998[13] until the 2001 switch to news/talk,[8] and again during the mid-2000s restoration of the standards format.[12]
WLAM had planned to drop ESPN Radio in favor of programming from Boston's WEEI in January 2008,[14] but the deal between Nassau and Entercom ended up collapsing.[15] The ESPN Radio format would remain until February 2, 2009, when WLAM and WLVP switched to the current oldies format.[16] In conjunction with the change, the stations began simulcasting WCSH's morning and early evening newscasts, a move made to continue the newscasts' availability via radio even after the station's own 87.7 MHz audio is discontinued following the shutdown of analog television signals.[16][17]
Initially locally programmed, in early 2010 WLAM and WLVP became affiliates of The True Oldies Channel.[18] Additionally, on August 2, the station added The Jeff Santos Show from WWZN in Boston;[19] this in effect took WLAM's morning drive programming back to a news/talk format, as Santos' program immediately follows the simulcast of WCSH's morning newscast. The stations' format was modified once more on August 6, 2011, when sports talk was re-added to the schedule 7 days a week via locally-produced shows and high school football and basketball from the Maine Sports Network (which previously provided some weekend programming to WJJB-FM).[20]
WLAM, along with 16 other Nassau stations in northern New England, was purchased at bankruptcy auction by WBIN Media Company, a company controlled by Bill Binnie, on May 22, 2012. Binnie already owns WBIN-TV in Derry, New Hampshire.[21][22] The deal was completed on November 30, 2012.[23] On December 9, 2015, Binnie agreed to sell WLAM and WLVP to Blue Jey Broadcasting Company, controlled by Bob Bittner, for $135,000.[24]
References
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External links
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WLAM
- Radio-Locator Information on WLAM
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WLAM
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