KWAM
KWAM (990 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Memphis, Tennessee. The station airs a talk radio format and is owned by Todd Starnes’ Starnes Media Group.[1][2] The studios and offices are on Murray Road in Memphis. The transmitter is located off Bridgeport Road in Marion, Arkansas.[3]
City | Memphis, Tennessee |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Memphis metropolitan area |
Frequency | 990 kHz |
Branding | The Mighty 990 |
Slogan | "The Mid-South's Conservative Blowtorch" |
Programming | |
Format | Talk |
Ownership | |
Owner | Todd Starnes (Starnes Media Group) |
History | |
First air date | 1946West Memphis) | (as KWEM
Former call signs | KWEM (1946–1959) |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 35873 |
Class | B |
Power | 10,000 watts day 450 watts night |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°8′4.00″N 90°5′38.00″W |
Translator(s) | 107.9 W300DE (Memphis) |
Links | |
Webcast | Listen live |
Website | www |
By day, KWAM broadcasts with 10,000 watts. But because AM 990 is a Canadian clear-channel frequency, the station must reduce power at night to 450 watts. To allow listeners in Memphis to hear the station on FM, KWAM is simulcast on translator station W300DE at 107.9 MHz.[4]
KWAM has a colorful history at the time as KWEM (1946–1959), helping "break" artists such as Elvis Presley, B.B. King, Johnny Cash, Ike Turner and Howlin' Wolf in the 1950s and 60s.
Programming
KWAM has a schedule of both local and nationally syndicated talk shows. Syndicated shows and hosts include Red Eye Radio, Armstrong and Getty, Bill O'Reilly, Todd Starnes, Sebastian Gorka, Lars Larson, Larry Elder, and Ben Shapiro. Weekday mornings are hosted by Tim Van Horn on Wake Up Memphis. Local weekend shows include Midsouth Gardening, Tool Talk Radio, Memphis Comic and Fantasy Radio, The Emir Caner Show, The Catholic Cafe, Talk Money, The Real Resistance, Behind The Badge, The Labor Agenda Show, All Things Fulfilled, Main and Mulberry, and Candid Conversations. Some hours are paid brokered programming. Most hours begin with national news from Salem Radio Network's TownHall.com.
History
Early years
In 1946, the station first signed on as KWEM in West Memphis, Arkansas.[5] The call sign referred to the original city of license, WEst Memphis. KWEM was a daytimer, owned by West Memphis Broadcasting, powered at 1,000 watts and required to sign-off at sunset each day.
Because West Memphis is located west of the Mississippi River, the station's call letters began with a "K," while call letters in Memphis mostly begin with a "W." Even when it relocated to Memphis, east of the Mississippi, it kept its "K" call sign.[6]
The Memphis Sound
In 1954, the station was bought by E. D. Rivers, Jr.[7] Rivers got the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to allow KWEM to move across the river into Memphis. He started the "Dee" Rivers Stations Group, which later owned WEAS-FM in Springfield/Savannah, Georgia, and WGOV (now WGUN) in Valdosta, Georgia, as well as other stations in Georgia and Florida. In 1959, Rivers changed the call letters of AM 990 to KWAM.[8]
In the 1960s, the station got FCC permission to boost its power to 10,000 watts, using a directional antenna, but it still could not broadcast after sunset. In the 1950s and 60s, the "Mighty 990" gained fame for playing "The Memphis Sound," including locally recorded soul music, R&B, country music and rockabilly. Its website history page says "KWAM helped launch the careers of B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, Ike Turner and many Sun Studios stars such as Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash."[9]
Gospel and religion
Around 1980, as music listening moved over to FM radio, KWAM began airing religion shows, selling blocks of time to preachers and playing black gospel music.[10] In 1981, Dee Rivers Stations acquired FM station 101.1 KLYX, which was renamed KWAM-FM. At first, it also aired a gospel and religious format like its AM counterpart. But in 1983, the call letters were changed to KRNB, with the station switching to a rhythmic contemporary and disco format, while 990 KWAM continued its gospel sound.[11]
In 1986, KWAM got nighttime authorization. It was allowed to stay on the air after sunset, but at 450 watts.[12]
Changes in ownership
In 1998, KWAM and its FM station, now known as KJMS, were sold to Clear Channel Communications. Clear Channel had previously acquired AM 1070 WDIA, which airs a full service black format, and KJMS's chief urban rival, 97.1 WHRK.[13]
Clear Channel sold KWAM to Concord Media for $1 million in 2000.[14] Concord switched KWAM to a talk radio format, which competes with iHeartMedia (formerly Clear Channel) talk station AM 600 WREC. Several years later, KWAM changed hands again, this time bought by Legacy Media, which also owns WEKS, an FM country music station in Zebulon, Georgia, just outside Atlanta. In 2017, Legacy Media added a 250 watt FM translator station to simulcast KWAM, 107.9 W300DE. The next year, Legacy Media would change the station's branding to "KWAM The Voice - Talk Radio for the Midsouth."
Legacy Media sold KWAM as well as its translator for $685,000 to the upstart Starnes Media Group, which is owned by Todd Starnes, a long-time journalist who served stints at Baptist Press and later Fox News before starting his own radio station in his native Memphis.[15] Upon the close of the purchase, Starnes Media Group changed the station's branding to reflect the history of the station, renaming it "The Mighty 990."
References
- "KWAM Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
- "KWAM Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
- Radio-Locator.com/KWAM
- Radio-Locator.com/W300DE
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1948 page 78
- OldRadio.com/KWtrivia
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1954 page 79
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1959 page B-232
- KWAMtheVoice.com/archive
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1980 page C-213
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1984 page B-239
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1990 page B-289
- Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 1999 page D-414
- Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 2005 page D-480
- "Former Fox News Radio Host Todd Starnes Purchases Memphis AM.- Inside Radio". insideradio.com. 9 January 2020.
External links
- KWAM in the FCC's AM station database
- KWAM on Radio-Locator
- KWAM in Nielsen Audio's AM station database