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WPEK

Coordinates: 35°32′48″N 82°28′15″W / 35.54667°N 82.47083°W / 35.54667; -82.47083
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WPEK
Broadcast areaAsheville, North Carolina
Frequency880 kHz
Branding880AM The Revolution
Programming
FormatProgressive talk
AffiliationsJones Radio Networks, ABC News
Ownership
Owner
WKSF, WQNQ, WQNS, WWNC, WMXF
History
First air date
1988
Former call signs
WTZY, WWNC
Call sign meaning
PEaK (previous format)
Technical information
ClassD
Power5,000 watts (Daytime)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website880TheRevolution.com

WPEK (880 AM), known as "880 the Revolution", is a daytime-only AM radio station in Asheville, North Carolina. It is licensed to the nearby town of Fairview.

History

File:WPEK The Revolution (logo).jpg
WPEK former logo

WTZY signed on in the mid-'90s with a talk radio format, the second Asheville area station to air Rush Limbaugh (after WSKY).

When the station's talk programming was moved to WWNC, WTZY became WPEK "The Peak", a classic country station. Later, the format was adult standards.

In 2004,[1] the format was switched to progressive talk. For several years, much of the programming came from Air America Media. Today the station broadcasts talk shows by hosts Bill Press, Stephanie Miller, Ed Schultz,[2] and Norman Goldman.

In 2010, WPEK dropped Thom Hartmann, who moved to WPVM, to add their first local weekday hosts Lesley Groetsch and Blake Butler, whose "Local Edge Radio" includes "politics, arts and entertainment, live music and local listener call-ins".[3]

Weekend programing includes Mountain Music Time, a program of traditional bluegrass and mountain music broadcast on Saturday mornings, followed by an hour of the Errington Thompson Show. The remainder of the weekend is syndicated and sponsored national programming.

References

  1. ^ Citizen-Times Article
  2. ^ Kiss, Tony (2010-01-22). "Air America radio network's demise to have little local impact". Asheville Citizen-Times. Retrieved 2010-01-22. [dead link]
  3. ^ "More changes come to 880-AM radio station". Asheville Citizen-Times. 2010-02-15. Retrieved 2010-02-18. [dead link]

35°32′48″N 82°28′15″W / 35.54667°N 82.47083°W / 35.54667; -82.47083