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WKBZ

Coordinates: 43°16′36″N 86°15′14″W / 43.27667°N 86.25389°W / 43.27667; -86.25389
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 23:56, 12 August 2020 (Task 30 - update Template:Infobox radio station following a redesign (+genfixes)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WKBZ
Frequency1090 kHz
BrandingNewsTalk 1090
Programming
FormatNews-Talk
Ownership
Owner
WKBZ, WMRR, WOOD-FM, WMUS
History
First air date
1947; 77 years ago (1947)
Former call signs
WMUS (1947–2005)
Call sign meaning
Former call letters of two Muskegon stations, 850 and 1520 AM
Technical information
ClassD
Power1,000 watts (Daytime)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitehttps://newstalk1090.iheart.com/

WKBZ is a news/talk radio station in Muskegon, Michigan on the frequency of 1090 AM owned by iHeartMedia, Inc..

History

The current WKBZ is the former WMUS. WMUS began operations in 1947 and became the second radio station serving Muskegon, after the original WKBZ (today's WGVS); it began as a general-interest independent variety station featuring Associated Press newscasts. WMUS also inaugurated the first FM broadcasts in Muskegon in the summer of 1947, just a few months after the AM signed on, with WMUS-FM at 100.5; the FM station was dark by the start of the 1950s but came back on at its current frequency in 1962.

WMUS moved into a MOR/beautiful music format in the early 1960s, promoting itself as "the AM station with the FM sound" (1). Then in 1965, WMUS changed format to country music using the moniker "Top Gun Radio." A few years later WMUS-FM 106.9 began to simulcast WMUS's country format, and eventually the roles were reversed, with WMUS-FM becoming the primary signal and WMUS becoming the simulcast. This continued until April 2001, when both stations were sold to Clear Channel Communications. The AM facility adopted a news/talk format, while the FM facility remained unchanged. In April 2005, the call sign of WMUS was changed to WKBZ, marking the return of the call letters to the radio market after 4 years of absence. (They had been on the 850 frequency, now WGVS, from 1926 to 1999, and on 1520 kHz from 1999 to 2001.)

References

43°16′36″N 86°15′14″W / 43.27667°N 86.25389°W / 43.27667; -86.25389