WNWZ

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WNWZ
City of license Grand Rapids, Michigan
Branding Touch 1410
Slogan The Best Old School and R&B
Frequency 1410 kHz
Repeaters 95.7-2 WLHT-HD2
Format Urban Adult Contemporary
Power 1,000 watts (daytime)
48 watts (nighttime)
Class D
Facility ID 55648
Callsign meaning NeWZ(Former News Branding)
Former callsigns WRCV (7/5/96-9/4/98)
WGRD (5/14/90-7/5/96)
WKTH (3/17/86-5/14/90)
WXQT (6/29/81-3/17/86)
WGRD (1948-6/29/81)
Owner Townsquare Media
(Townsquare Media of Grand Rapids, Inc.)
Sister stations WFGR, WGRD-FM, WLHT-FM, WNWZ, WTRV
Webcast [1]
Website [2]

WNWZ (1410 AM, "Touch 1410") is a radio station broadcasting a Urban Adult Contemporary format, licensed to Grand Rapids, Michigan.

The station is simulcast on the HD2 subchannel of Hot adult contemporary sister station WLHT 95.7.

History

WGRD

The station first began broadcasting under the WGRD call sign in 1948. As AM 1410 was originally a daytime-only station, the WGRD calls stood for Grand Rapids Daytime. The station adopted the Top 40 music format in 1959 and was a top-rated station in the Grand Rapids market during the late 1950s and early 1960s, though the station had lost ground to WLAV 1340 and WZZM-FM 95.7 by the end of the decade. WGRD made a number of formatic adjustments in the mid-1960s in response to its falling ratings, shifting to an adult contemporary format in 1964 and then to a Top 40/oldies mix the following year before tweaking back to Top 40 in 1967. WGRD reclaimed its market dominance after it added an FM signal at 97.9 MHz in 1971 (formerly WXTO), though AM 1410 was relegated to being a simulcast of the FM signal.

WXQT/Great Gold 14-K

In 1981, WGRD dropped its simulcast (middays were shadowcast) of the FM station and switched to a "Big Band" Music of Your Life format as WXQT. In 1984, WXQT flipped to oldies as "GREAT GOLD 14-K", which stood for "14 Karat Gold", focusing on pop oldies from 1958-1972. Under the direction of PD Allen Jackson, "The NEW 14-K" featured Jack Stack (who had done mornings on WGRD and WLAV back in the 1960s) mornings, Rich Kennedy middays, Larry Olek afternoons and Pugs Stella evenings. The station earned a respectable 2.4 share 12+ in the Summer 1984 Arbitron. In 1986, the local lineup was dropped in favor of the ABC/Satellite Music Network "Pure Gold" satellite format. Ratings crashed to a 0.9 share in the summer of 1986 Arbitron, under the new call sign WKTH.

More changes

In 1988, the station adopted Satellite Music Network's Z-Rock format, keeping the WKTH call letters. The station reverted to the WGRD calls in 1991, moving back to a simulcast of 97.9 FM's CHR format (which changed to Modern Rock in 1994). In 1996, WGRD changed calls to WRCV and switched to ABC Radio's syndicated "Real Country" format. The station continued to be a non-factor in the ratings. In September 1998, 1410 changed its calls to WNWZ and adopted a simulcast of CNN Headline News, which was replaced by News/Talk in October 2001 (mostly syndicated from the Michigan Talk Radio Network).

La Maquina Musical

A Spanish pop hits format was adopted on January 1, 2003, and was somewhat successful in the ratings given its poor signal, often ranking as Grand Rapids' third most popular AM station (behind only WOOD-AM and WBBL-AM) (see: 1). WNWZ was the first radio station to cater to the Spanish-speaking community in Grand Rapids 24 hours a day. In August 2010, a reunion of more than 60 former WGRD staff members was held in Grand Rapids, which included market legend Bruce Grant, the original program director from 1948, and dozens of other personalities from the AM 1410/97.9 history.

Funny 1410

On November 14, 2011, the station changed its format to comedy calling itself "Funny 1410".[1]

Touch 1410

The Comedy format was dropped in the Summer of 2013 for an Adult Urban Contemporary format as the "Touch" Moniker competing with GR's WYGR Audience. The station became the West Michigan home of the Steve Harvey Morning Show and remains as such today.

References

External links

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