WWJ (AM)

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WWJ
200px
City of license Detroit, Michigan
Broadcast area Metro Detroit
[1] (daytime)
[2] (nighttime)
Branding NewsRadio 950, WWJ
Slogan All News All the Time
Live, Local, and Committed to Detroit
Frequency 950 kHz (also on HD Radio)
97.1 FM HD2 (WXYT-FM)
First air date August 20, 1920
Format News
Power 50,000 watts
Class B (Regional)
Facility ID 9621
Transmitter coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Callsign meaning None. Assigned after requesting a call that could be easily understood.
Former callsigns 8MK (1920–1921)
WBL (1921–1922)
Affiliations CBS Radio News
Michigan IMG Sports Network (flagship)
Owner CBS Radio
(CBS Radio East Inc.)
Sister stations WWJ-TV, WKBD-TV, WDZH, WOMC, WXYT, WXYT-FM, WYCD
Webcast Listen Live
Website Detroit.CBSLocal.com

WWJ, 950 AM (a regional broadcast frequency),[1] is an all-news radio station located in Detroit, Michigan, United States. The station is also licensed by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for hybrid (HD) broadcasting.[2][3] August 20, 2015 marks the beginning of its 96th year of broadcasting.

Owned by the CBS Radio subsidiary of CBS Corporation, WWJ's studios are in the Panasonic Building in Southfield, and its transmitter is located near Newport. WWJ is the only commercial all-news radio station in Michigan. Co-owned television station WWJ-TV (channel 62) is the only CBS owned-and-operated station without any local news presence (the television station carried news programming from 1997 to 2002 through present-day sister station WKBD-TV and a morning news program that ran from 2009 to 2012).

History

Early years

WWJ, which debuted as the "Detroit News Radiophone" on August 20, 1920, was the outgrowth of interest in radio technology by the publishers of The Detroit News, combined with inventor Lee DeForest's longtime promotion of radio broadcasting.

In the first decade of the 20th century, James E. Scripps, the founder of the News, supported radio research conducted by Thomas E. Clark, and the April 4, 1906 issue of the paper publicized the receipt by the advertising department of an order, via radiotelegraphy, from the Clark-equipped steamer City of Detroit.[4] Clark's company soon failed, however, the newspaper continued to monitor developments, and in its December 13, 1919 issue heralded a broadcast of phonograph records by the U.S. Navy Station in Chicago[5] as a "great miracle".[6]

Meanwhile, the development of radio transmitters capable of audio transmissions led to Lee DeForest advocating the establishment of broadcasting stations, especially by newspapers. To publicize this idea, in late 1916 the DeForest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company began broadcasting a nightly entertainment and news program from its experimental station, 2XG, located in the Highbridge section of New York City.[7] However, DeForest was unsuccessful in interesting any publishers at this time, moreover, with the entrance of the United States into World War I, effective April 6, 1917 all civilian radio stations were shut down for the duration of the conflict.[8]

Advertisement for Radio News & Music, Inc., from page 193 of the March 25, 1920 Printers' Ink

The ban on civilian radio stations was lifted on October 1, 1919, and the DeForest company soon returned to broadcasting from its Highbridge station. Then, in early 1920, Clarence "C.S." Thompson, a DeForest associate, established Radio News & Music, Inc., which in March, 1920 took up the promotion of newspaper-run broadcasting stations, offering local franchises and asking in national advertisements "Is Your Paper to be One of the Pioneers distributing News and Music by Wireless?".[9] The Detroit News became Radio News and Music's first—and ultimately only—newspaper customer. In a May 28, 1920 letter, the News made arrangements to lease a DeForest OT-10 radio transmitter from Radio News & Music, in order to develop a broadcasting service.[10] William Edmund Scripps, son of the paper's founder and its then publisher, would play the key role in establishing the newspaper's radio station. A local teen-aged amateur radio operator, Michael DeLisle Lyons, was hired to install the equipment at the Detroit News Building, located at the corner of Lafayette and 2nd Avenues.[11][12]

In 1914 Lee DeForest had sold the commercial rights to his audion vacuum-tube patent to the American Telephone & Telegraph Company. However, he retained the right to sell equipment for "amateur and experimental use",[13] and the new station would operate under a standard amateur radio license, with the callsign 8MK.[14] Following the initial installation, to prepare the station for regular service Elton M. Plant, an aspiring reporter who had a good speaking and singing voice, was drafted as an announcer, while Frank Edwards was hired to perform engineering duties. The process of getting the station ready was conducted after normal work hours over a period of several months. William E. Scripps was particularly enthusiastic about the project, and kept close track as the equipment was being tested.[15] However, these tests were done with very limited publicity, as others at the paper worried that a radio station might adversely affect newspaper sales. In fact, 8MK was originally licensed in Michael DeLisle Lyons' name to hide the direct involvement of the Scripps family.[16]

Announcement in the August 31, 1920 Detroit News promoting the new "Detroit News Radiophone"[17]

On August 20, 1920 a series of trial broadcasts began, to check if the equipment was ready for regular service. This date marks what WWJ considers to be its official anniversary, although because the station was still unpublicized the audience consisted of only a small number of interested local amateur radio operators. The test programs proved satisfactory, so, on August 31, 1920, the front page of the Detroit News announced that nightly (except Sunday) broadcasts by the "Detroit News Radiophone" would start that evening. The debut program featured regularly updated returns for a primary election held that day, plus singing by Lois Johnson. At the beginning of the program, Elton Plant introduced Malcolm Bingay, the managing director of the Detroit News, as the broadcast's master of ceremonies.[18]

The station continued with daily broadcasts in September, most commonly between 7 and 8 p.m.[19] Although the initial programs consisted mostly of phonograph records interspersed with news announcements, programming also included fight results from the heavyweight championship bout between Jack Dempsey and Billy Miske on September 6,[20] and, in October, play-by-play accounts as the Cleveland Indians bested the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1920 World Series baseball championship.[21] Weekly vocal concerts were begun on September 23, with Mable Norton Ayers as the first featured artist.[22] By late October, the paper was boasting that "hundreds of Detroiters are now the possessors of wireless receiving sets by which they get the news bulletins, music and other features sent out by The News Radiophone",[23] as the station prepared to broadcast returns for that year's presidential election on November 2.[24]

By 1922, the station staff had increased to ten,[25] with the station's costs borne by the newspaper—there was no advertising until the mid-1920s. Performers were not paid, however, the station was able to attract numerous "illustrious persons" to talk over the airwaves from the station's "phonitorium" studio, including, by 1922, Lillian Gish, Fanny Brice, Ty Cobb, and Babe Ruth.[26]

8MK's transmitting wavelength was 200 meters (1500 kilohertz), the shared—thus interference-prone—standard amateur wavelength, although newspaper accounts stated that sometimes it transmitted on other, less congested, wavelengths. In the fall of 1921, the News applied for a Special Amateur station license,[27] which would provide better coverage by allowing the station to move to a wavelength less prone to interference. However, on October 13, 1921 the Department of Commerce instead issued the station a Limited Commercial license.[28] While this had the benefit of including an assignment to a less congested wavelength, in this case 360 meters (833 kilohertz), it also meant the station's continued use of DeForest equipment was now in violation of AT&T's patent monopoly of commercial radio equipment. This potential problem was soon resolved by the purchase of a 500-watt transmitter from AT&T subsidiary Western Electric, which was installed on January 28, 1922.[29]

As part of the switch to the Limited Commercial license, the "Detroit News Radiophone" was assigned a new, randomly chosen, callsign, WBL. However, the News found that listeners had trouble hearing this call correctly,[30] so the newspaper asked the regional Radio Inspector, S. W. Edwards, to have it changed to something more phonetically distinct, requesting WKL or WWW. Neither of these calls was available, so one similar to their request, WWJ, was assigned, effective March 3, 1922.[31][32] (The government bureau responsible for radio regulation at the time was the United States Department of Commerce's Bureau of Navigation).

On December 1, 1921, the Department of Commerce for the first time established regulations for broadcasting stations, setting aside two wavelengths: 360 meters (833 kilohertz) for entertainment, and 485 meters (619 kilohertz) for official weather and other government reports.[33] On March 3, 1922 WWJ was granted permission to broadcast on 485 meters, in addition to its initial 360 meter assignment. In 1922, there was a rapid expansion in the number of broadcasting stations, all sharing the single entertainment wavelength of 360 meters, which required progressively more complicated timesharing schedules between stations in the same region. (On May 4, the News ran an editorial complaining about having to yield some of its hours to WCX, a station licensed to the Detroit Free Press which was making its debut.)[34]

In late September 1922, a second entertainment wavelength, 400 meters (750 kilohertz), was made available for "Class B" stations, which were ones with higher powers and better quality equipment and programming. Both WWJ and WCX qualified to use this new wavelength on a timesharing basis. In early 1923, the United States expanded its broadcast station allocations to a continuous band of 81 frequencies, in 10 kilohertz steps from 550 to 1350, with stations now using a single frequency, no longer having to broadcast entertainment and official reports on different frequencies. Under the new allocations, a Class B frequency of 580 kHz (516.9 meters) was to be used exclusively by qualified stations in the "Detroit/Dearborn" area, and by June, 1923 both WWJ and WCX were assigned to this frequency. In January, 1925 WWJ moved to a new Class B frequency, 850 kHz (352.7 meters), where it no longer had to share time. A series of frequency reassignments followed, as the government struggled to structure the broadcast band to accommodate an increasing congested environment. Eventually the band was divided into three frequency classes: Clear, Regional and Local. By February 28, 1929, WWJ was operating full-time on the regional frequency of 920 kHz (325.9 meters), with a transmitter power of 1,000 watts, the maximum permitted at the time for a regional frequency.

In 1937 WWJ became one of the first stations to increase its power to the new regional frequency limit of 5,000 watts. On March 29, 1941 as part of the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) frequency reassignment, the station moved to 950 kHz where it remains to this day. The programming throughout this time was focused on variety. That same year, WWJ initiated Michigan's first FM broadcasts after replacing its Apex station, W8XWJ;[35] the FM station began as W45D, undergoing five callsign changes afterward – as WENA, WWJ-FM, WJOI, WYST and WKRK – before becoming WXYT-FM. During the 1940s it transmitted most of the NBC Red Network schedule, and locally produced news, entertainment and music programming. After World War II, especially as television grew in household reach and popularity, music and regularly scheduled local news would make up a larger portion of its format as television eroded support for variety programming on radio and the Golden Age of Radio gradually ended.

Adoption of news and talk format

With the advent of FM radio and FM stereo broadcasting, WWJ phased out its daytime Middle of the Road music programming in May 1971 and became a strictly news and talk station during the daytime hours (although for the first several years of the all-news format, the station simulcast the beautiful music format of WWJ-FM, 97.1, during the overnight hours). The all-news format on WWJ has remained since then, enabling it to rank consistently among the Detroit area's most popular stations with adult listeners, occasionally finishing in first place in recent surveys of overall listenership.

In 1987, the Federal Broadcasting Corporation, run by David Herriman, purchased WWJ and WJOI (now WXYT-FM) from the new owner of The Detroit News, the Gannett Company (now the owner of the Detroit Free Press), which was required to sell the stations immediately by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) because of crossownership rules in effect at that time. On March 9, 1989, CBS bought the station, with its ownership being transferred to Infinity Broadcasting after CBS's 1996 acquisition of that group – although further corporate reorganization has put the station directly under the CBS corporate brand name once again in recent years.

WWJ (AM) transmitter relocation and signal upgrade

When CBS acquired WWJ-TV (channel 62) in 1995 and needed a site for a new transmission tower for improving the UHF television station's signal coverage, the WWJ radio transmitter site in Oak Park was partially dismantled (the taller north tower was razed) to make room for the television tower. The AM transmitter facility was replaced in late 1998 by a new six-tower array in Monroe County, near Newport. The new site allowed WWJ to upgrade to 50,000 watts, greatly improving its nighttime signal in the Downriver communities, where WWJ had a weak signal, as it had been using a directional antenna to protect established stations in Denver, Houston, Philadelphia and Chicago.

WWJ has the highest field strength in a single direction (nighttime pattern) of any AM station in the United States (7,980 mV/m at a distance of 1 km).[36] With this powerful signal pointed due north, it can be heard in every part of the state of Michigan during the nighttime hours, and much of southern Lower Michigan during the day. WWJ's signal can even be heard in the Upper Peninsula and Mackinac area at night. WWJ uses a five-tower directional antenna during daytime hours, and a six-tower directional antenna during nighttime hours. Even though WWJ broadcasts with 50,000 watts, it is still considered a Regional station because 950 AM is a Regional frequency, on which only Class B and Class D stations may be assigned (however, Class A stations may be assigned outside of North America, in those countries which observe the 10 kHz frequency rules.) The move was not without its disadvantages, as the sheer distance of the new site from commercially important Oakland County meant the new signal, though adequate for home and outdoor listening, had trouble inside office buildings. The northeastern reaches of Metro Detroit receive only a fair signal, for the protection of a station in Barrie, Ontario, Canada even though the station there shut down its AM transmitter years earlier.

In 2013, all CBS-owned radio stations in Detroit moved their operations to the former Panasonic Building in Southfield.[37]

Programming

WWJ is believed to be the first station to broadcast news reports regularly, and the first regularly scheduled religious broadcast and play-by-play sports broadcast.[38]

WWJ provides "Traffic and Weather on the 8s" (featuring traffic reports and weather forecasts in ten-minute intervals beginning at :08 minutes past the hour), with traffic coverage provided by Detroit Traffic Reporters and forecasts by AccuWeather. WWJ has started to shy away from their moniker "All news, all the time", due to the station's occasional broadcasts of sporting events, around the same time non-commercial Michigan Radio, with which WWJ competes with in Flint and Ann Arbor, as Michigan's most-listened to news radio station. However, it retains a news radio format as a whole, using the new slogan, "Live, Local, and committed to Detroit". Along with sister station WXYT-FM, WWJ was the flagship station of the Detroit Pistons from 2009-2014.[39] WWJ is also the flagship station of Michigan Wolverines football.[40]

In March 2005, WWJ began streaming its programming on the internet; in August 2005, the station began offering podcasts of newsmakers, interviews, and some of the station's feature programming. WWJ also began broadcasting its signal in the HD Radio format in August 2006.[41] Anchors heard on WWJ on weekdays include Roberta Jasina and Tom Jordan mornings, Jackie Paige middays, and Greg Bowman and Jane Bauer at afternoon drive. WWJ produces several feature programs heard during the day, including The Automotive Minute with Jeff Gilbert and Eye on Health with Dr. Deanna Lites.

On-air staff

Current on-air staff[42]

Anchors

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  • Jayne Bower
  • Greg Bowman
  • Mike Campbell
  • Jeff DeFran
  • Roberta Jasina
  • Tom Jordan
  • Rob Mason
  • Jackie Paige
  • Rob Sanford
  • Paul Snider
Weather

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  • Carl Babinski
  • Dave Bowers
  • Carl Erickson
  • John Feerick
  • Dean DeVore
  • Bob Larson
  • Kerry Schwindenhemmer
  • Dr. Joe Sobel
  • Brian Thompson
  • Heather Zehr
Sports
  • Jeff Lesson
  • Tony Ortiz
  • Ryan Wooley
Studio traffic reporters

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  • John Bailey
  • Tony Bruscato
  • Marty Bufalini
  • Jim Daniels
  • Lance Howard
  • Mike Lindeman
  • Jo-Jo Shutty-MacGregor
Chopper 950 reporters
  • Bill Szumanski
  • Lance Howard
Specialty reporters
  • Ed Coury - Wall Street Journal Report
  • Ron Dewey
  • Murray Feldman - consumer reporter
  • Beth Fisher
  • Jeff Gilbert - automotive reporter
  • Jon Hewett
  • John McElroy - AutoBeat reporter/auto analyst
  • Matt Roush - Great Lakes I.T. Report
  • Tim Skubick - Lansing bureau chief
  • Vickie Thomas - CityBeat reporter

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. http://www.fcc.gov/encyclopedia/am-broadcast-station-classes-clear-regional-and-local-channels
  2. http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_det.pl?Facility_id=9621
  3. http://hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?id=27
  4. "'Ads' By Wireless", Detroit News, August 4, 1906, page 2.
  5. "Country-wide Concert is Given by Wireless", Detroit News, December 12, 1919, page 15. The test broadcast was conducted by Grover M. Dickman, chief electrician.
  6. "Music in the Air", Detroit News, December 13, 1919, page 14.
  7. "Wireless Newspaper Wafted Out to Sea", New York Tribune, November 7, 1916, page 5, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1916-11-07/ed-1/seq-5/
  8. Father of Radio, Lee DeForest, 1950, pages 336-338, 341.
  9. The initial advertisements for Radio News & Music, Inc., appeared on page 20 of the March 13, 1920 The Fourth Estate, and page 202 of the March 18, 1920 Printers' Ink.
  10. "WWJ—Pioneer in Broadcasting", Cynthia Boyes Young, Michigan History, December, 1960, page 413.
  11. "WWJ, a Jesuit and the Bomb" Story of a young radio pioneer, who became a Jesuit priest and supplied the final piece of our first Atomic Bomb, Jeffrey A. McQueen, 2003, http://www.oldradio.com/archives/stations/wwj1.htm Later that year, Michael and his brother Frank, also assembled the first radio in a police car in Toledo, Ohio (with Ed Clark who started WJR, 760 AM, in Detroit). They captured a prowler using the radio, making national headlines. RCA got the contract to install radios in police cars across the country.
  12. "The Night Radio Was Born" by Robert P. Rimes, Detroit News, August 21, 1960, Section E, page 1. "Michael D. Lyons, who had installed the transmitter, stood nearby and gave a smile of approval as the first broadcast began."
  13. DeForest, pages 326-327.
  14. The leading "8" in the callsign indicated that the station was located in the eighth Radio Inspection District. There is varying information about the holder of the 8MK license. In the April 4, 1920 issue of the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times, C. E. Urban's "The Radio Amateur" column lists 8MK as newly assigned to Howard Bowman, 171 Kenilworth Avenue in Detroit. (Bowman appears to have been a Detroit News employee—the November 7, 1917 issue of The Fourth Estate has a reference to "Howard Bowman of the Detroit News" and an article in the February 26, 1919 issue of the newspaper, "Four Die in D. U. R. Crash", credits him as a "staff correspondent".) The "Local Calls" list in the August 17, 1920 issue of the Detroit Radio News also lists Howard Bowman for 8MK, but the next issue, dated October 30th, 1920, lists 8MK as "Detroit News (Fone), Cor. Second and Lafayette Ave., Detroit, Mich." In the June 30, 1921 edition of the Department of Commerce's annual Amateur Radio Stations of the United States the owner is "Radio News and Music (Inc.), Detroit, Michigan", while the May, 1922 Consolidated Radio Call Book lists 8MK's owner as "Radio News and Music, Inc. (M. D. Lyons), Lafayette and 2nd Ave." In a 1973 letter, Michael Lyons wrote that the license had been initially issued under his name.
  15. Radio's First Broadcaster: An Autobiography of Elton M. Plant, 1989, pages 5, 17: "Will E. Scripps... was an avid fan. He used to drop in at night to check on how we were doing, and ask if we were getting out on the air. He was as boyish about it as anyone could be. He was quite thrilled about the whole setup. Apparently he could see in it, something more than the rest of us".
  16. "The Consolidated Radio Call Book," May 1922, page 229.
  17. "The News Radiophone To Give Vote Results", Detroit News, August 31, 1920, page 1.
  18. Plant, pages 20-21.
  19. Commercial Broadcasting Pioneer: The WEAF Experiment, 1922-1926, William Peck Banning, 1946, pages 49-50.
  20. "Radio Spreads Fight News Broadcast in 30 Seconds", Detroit News, September 7, 1920, page 1.
  21. "Radiophone To Carry Result of World Series Game Sunday", Detroit News, October 9, 1920, page 1.
  22. "Sings for Wireless", Detroit News, September 23, 1920, page 1.
  23. "To Build a Radio", Detroit News, October 27, 1920, Section 2, page 1.
  24. "News to Spread Election Returns by 4 Channels", Detroit News, October 31, 1920, page 1.
  25. WWJ-The Detroit News; the history of Radiophone broadcasting by the earliest and foremost of newspaper stations; together with information on radio for amateur and expert, 1922, page 19.
  26. Ibid., pages 14-15.
  27. "Broadcasting's Oldest Stations: An Examination of Four Claimants", Joseph E. Baudino and John Kittross, Journal of Broadcasting, Winter, 1977, pages 75-76.
  28. "Radio Department", Detroit News, November 6, 1921, page 17: "The Detroit News radio station is now operating under a limited commercial license call letters, WBL. The wavelength used is 360 meters and a special antenna has been erected to use this wave. The station will transmit as before beginning every evening, except Sunday."
  29. Young, page 420.
  30. Plant, page 36.
  31. Young, page 423.
  32. Although there has been speculation that the new call letters could stand for stockholders William and John Scripps, page 82 of the Detroit News 1922 official history, WWJ-The Detroit News, stated that "WWJ is not the initials of any name. It is a symbol."
  33. Building the Broadcast Band
  34. Young, page 424.
  35. http://www.radioworld.com/article/a-detroit-apex-station-in-/221468 "A Detroit Apex Station in 1936" by John Schneider
  36. http://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=9621
  37. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  38. wwj America's oldest radio station.
  39. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  40. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  41. http://www.hdradio.com/stations
  42. About WWJ Newsradio 950
  • Michiguide.com - WWJ History
  • Jeffrey Allan McQueen, great-nephew of Father Michael DeLisle Lyons, who was initially licensed "8MK"
  • "WWJ--Pioneer in Broadcasting", Cynthia Boyes Young, Michigan History, December, 1960, (vol. 44, no. 4), pages 411-433

External links