WLIP

AM 1050 WLIP
City Kenosha, Wisconsin
Broadcast area Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Slogan "Kenosha's Radio Station"
Frequency 1050 kHz
Format Talk/Personality, Full service
Power 250 watts day
250 watts night
Class B
Facility ID 28478
Transmitter coordinates 42°33′10″N 87°53′38″W / 42.55278°N 87.89389°W / 42.55278; -87.89389
Callsign meaning original owner William LIPman[1]
Affiliations CBS, Westwood One, Learfield Sports
Owner Alpha Media
(Alpha Media Licensee LLC)
Webcast Listen Live
Website wlip.com

WLIP (AM | 1050 ) is a radio station located in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S. serving the Chicago-Milwaukee metropolitan region along the west shore of Lake Michigan with 250 watts effective radiated power, and also streams worldwide at www.wlip.com. The station is owned by Alpha Media, through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC.

History

At 8:00 AM on Sunday, May 18, 1947, WLIP signed on the air from the basement of the Kenosha National Bank Building at 625 57th Street in downtown Kenosha, licensed as a daytime-only station and 250-watts. In 1982, WLIP built and opened its new studios at 8500 Green Bay Road.

In 1962, the station launched an FM sister 95.1 WLIP-FM, later known as WJZQ, and now the current-day WIIL

During the 1960s, the AM station programmed a Pop music format; however the owner, Bill Lipman, did not allow for "Hits" to be played. A weekend show with former station staffer Terry Havel would be the only show featuring the hits. The station would sign off at sundown. For many years, it was a Union Shop, with announcers represented by AFTRA and engineers represented by IBEW. This was due to the influence of labor, because of American Motors.

WLIP-FM offered separate programming during that time, and carried an easy listening format. Bill Lipman's wife, Anne, was influential in the music choices of WLIP-FM, again until 1975 when new management took over. In 1975, these rules ended under new management and the station moved to an Adult Contemporary format as "Music 1050" with a high dedication to the Kenosha area as the station had in the past and still does somewhat today. Lipman's sons and daughter represented ownership's interests of the stations by the late 1970s. In the 1987, the Federal Communications Commission granted WLIP permission to broadcast on a 24-hour-a-day basis. During the 1990s the station continued with its Adult Contemporary format, but was mostly various talk programming by the mid 1990s with Oldies music played nights and weekends. In 1996 the station changed its format to Adult Standards from the now-Dial Global Adult Standards format (syndicated) This format lasted until December 2003 when the station changed format and affiliation to the now-defunct Unforgettable Favorites format from ABC. This format was switched over the 4th of July weekend of 2005 to ABC's Oldies Radio now known as Classic Hits Radio.

Current programming

WLIP airs local talk programming during most of the day and replays some of them in the evenings with the syndicated talk show Jim Bohannon's America in the Morning and The Jim Bohannon Show. On the weekends it airs how-to programming, music programming, brokered shows, and talk shows most of which are local.

Music

WLIP has broadcast music most of its life. Currently the station plays 1960s-1970s oldies music during part of each weekend, along with specialty 1950s-1960s oldies shows Jukebox Saturday Night on Saturdays and The Doo-Wop Diner on Sundays. The Music of the Stars with Lou Rugani has aired each Sunday morning since 1992 and also at times in the afternoon.

Station alumni

Since its launch in 1947, many people have gone through WLIP and have moved onto larger markets. Some of these airstaff and management include:

Past logos

References

  1. "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  2. Potente, Joe (2010-11-26). "Longtime radio icon Kern hangs up his headphones". Kenosha News.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.