WCAR: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 42°07′27″N 83°12′05″W / 42.12417°N 83.20139°W / 42.12417; -83.20139
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| owner = Birach Holdings, Inc.
| owner = Birach Holdings, Inc.
| webcast =
| webcast =
| website = [http://www.espn1090.com ESPN1090.com]
| website = www.nbcsportsradiodetroit.com
}}
}}
'''WCAR''' is a 24-hour [[sports radio]] station based out of [[Livonia, Michigan]]. The station is an affiliate of [[NBC Sports Radio]].
'''WCAR''' is a 24-hour [[sports radio]] station based out of [[Livonia, Michigan]]. The station is an affiliate of [[NBC Sports Radio]].

Revision as of 04:02, 3 September 2013

WCAR
Broadcast area[1] (Daytime)
[2] (Nighttime)
Frequency1090 kHz
BrandingNBC Sports Radio 1090
Programming
FormatSports Talk
AffiliationsNBC Sports Radio
Ownership
OwnerBirach Holdings, Inc.
History
First air date
October 23, 1963
Former call signs
WIID (?-7/18/79)
WTAK (?-?)
WERB (1963-?)
Call sign meaning
Car (a reference to Detroit's automotive industry)
Technical information
Facility ID73397
ClassB
Power250 watts (daytime)
500 watts (nighttime)
Links
Websitewww.nbcsportsradiodetroit.com

WCAR is a 24-hour sports radio station based out of Livonia, Michigan. The station is an affiliate of NBC Sports Radio.

History

For the history of the station formerly known as WCAR from 1939 to 1978, at 1130 on the AM dial, see WDFN.

1090 AM was originally WERB in Garden City, Michigan, co-owned with the now-defunct WBRB 1430 AM in Mount Clemens and airing a full-service middle of the road/contemporary music format aimed at the western suburbs of Wayne County. The original owner was Malrite Communications.[citation needed] In about 1966, WERB became WTAK, still under Malrite's ownership, notable for being the Detroit area's first all-talk radio station; the WTAK air staff included such Detroit radio notables as Tom Clay, Vic Caputo and Paul Winter. WTAK's talk format went under in about 1970, however, due to many advertisers pulling their business from the station because of the controversial nature of some of the topics discussed.[citation needed]

Following a sale to Wolpin Broadcasting in 1969, WTAK changed to WIID and went back to a suburban-oriented MOR format, and then to ethnic programming by the mid-1970s.

For years afterward, the bulk of AM 1090's programming, as WIID and later (starting in 1979) WCAR, consisted of ethnic programming and some English-language talk. During the mid-1990s, WCAR 1090 was also briefly the Detroit affiliate station for Radio AAHS, a now-defunct nationwide radio network featuring programming for children, and then (after Radio AAHS shut down in 1998) a simulcast of the Minneapolis-based dance music format Beat Radio (which replaced AAHS on all ten of the company-owned former-AAHS stations around the country).

In recent years, much of WCAR's programming had been simulcast on sister station WOAP 1080 AM in Owosso, focused on the Lansing area. WOAP now airs separate content.

On May 2009, WCAR and WOAP were sold to Birach Broadcasting. Michigan Catholic Radio ended its broadcasts on WCAR on July 31, 2009 when Birach took over the station. Beginning in 2009, the station aired News / Talk with Imus in the Morning, Brian Kilmeade, Robert Wuhl, Jim Bohannon and Red Eye Radio with News content from CNN, Fox and MarketWatch.

A new afternoon drive show featuring local legendary broadcasters Bill Bonds & Rich Fisher (Bonds & Fisher) debuted on October 3, 2011. Co-hosting and producing was Detroit radio veteran Rachel Nevada. The show was cancelled in late December 2011. The station considered retooling the talk format, but management decided it would not work, and went in a different direction.

On February 1, 2012, WCAR switched from a talk format to a sports format featuring ESPN Radio programming. [1][2] The change was announced on Detroit websites the day before the change. It was also mentioned by Mike Tirico during the Illinois-Michigan State basketball game on January 31, 2012 on ESPN.

The flip signified the return of ESPN Radio to the Detroit market for the first time since 2007.

WCAR began locally-produced sports talk programming in April 2012 with a one-hour Detroit Red Wings playoff show. That eventually expanded into a daily afternoon drive program, and more local shows were added until the station was running local programming from 1 pm to 10 pm on most weekdays.

The locally-produced programming abruptly ended on May 3, 2013, and WCAR switched over to 100% syndicated programming, with some dead air in spots.

Current Programming

At 10:00 PM on Friday, July 13, 2013, ESPN Radio pulled their programming off of WCAR, ending their affiliation with the station. WCAR picked up NBC Sports Radio in its place.[3] WCAR is using 100% of the NBC Sports Radio national programming with no local programming announced.

WCAR is directly competing with WXYT, WXYT-FM, WMGC-FM, and WDFN as the four sports stations in Detroit.

See also

References

Sources

External links

42°07′27″N 83°12′05″W / 42.12417°N 83.20139°W / 42.12417; -83.20139