WVON

WVON
City Berwyn Illinois
Broadcast area Chicago market
Branding AM 1690 WVON
Slogan The Talk of Chicago
Frequency 1690 AM (kHz)
(also on HD Radio)
First air date 2003
Format Urban Talk
Power 10,000 watts (day)
1,000 watts (night)
Class B (regional)
Facility ID 87178
Transmitter coordinates 41°44′14″N 87°42′04″W / 41.73722°N 87.70111°W / 41.73722; -87.70111Coordinates: 41°44′14″N 87°42′04″W / 41.73722°N 87.70111°W / 41.73722; -87.70111
Callsign meaning "The Voice Of the Negro"[1]
"The Voice Of the Nation."[1]
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(CC Licenses, LLC)
Sister stations WEBG, WGCI-FM, WGRB, WKSC-FM, WLIT, WVAZ
Webcast Listen Live (via iHeartRadio)
Website wvon.com

WVON ("The Voice of A Nation") is a radio station licensed to Berwyn, Illinois, serving the greater Chicago area, which airs an African-American-oriented talk format. WVON is owned by Midway Broadcasting Corporation, and broadcast on the 1690 kHz frequency via a LMA local marketing agreement with frequency owner iHeartMedia, Inc.. WVON has studios on the city's South Side in Avalon Park neighborhood, and a transmitter tower is located at 87th and Kedzie in the southwest side.

The station is noted for its cultural relevance and commitment to community advocacy and empowerment. For more than 50 years, the station has been at the forefront of issues impacting the Black community. It was a voice for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the 1960s and a springboard for President Barack Obama during the early days of his political career. Currently, the station has some of the country's most well-respected thoughtleaders as talk show hosts including the Rev. Al Sharpton, Tavis Smiley, Roland Martin, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr.

History

WVON began as WHFC in 1926, broadcasting from the Hotel Flanders in Chicago. Like many small stations of the time, WHFC was squeezed into a shared-time frequency, with as many as five stations taking turns on 1310.

In 1930, they were given permission to move to 1420 with two other stations. WHFC bought out the other two in 1936 and changed its city of license to Cicero, Illinois. WHFC was shifted to 1450 in 1941.

In 1963, WHFC became WVON when it was purchased by Leonard and Phil Chess, the owners of Chess Records, a successful record label specializing in blues music. WVON debuted on April 1, 1963 and quickly became a success playing R&B music, ranking consistently among the top five most listened to stations in the market. Despite having only 250 watts of power, WVON's non-directional signal was engineered well enough to blanket the south and west sides of Chicago.

WVON was a "heritage" station to Chicago's black community featuring great Black air personalities like Moses "Lucky" Cordell, Bruce Brown, Herb Kent "The Cool Gent",[2][3][4][5] E. Rodney Jones, Cecil Hale, Joe "Youngblood" Cobb, Ed "Nassau Daddy" Cook, Bill "Butterball" Crane, Pervis Spann, Yvonne Daniels, Don Cornelius, Sid McCoy (who would accompany Cornelius when he formed Soul Train), Richard Pegue, Bernadine C. Washington, Jay Johnson, newsmen Roy Wood and Jim Moloney, a very young reporter/engineer Larry Langford and many others. WVON became well-known outside the Chicago area as well. Berry Gordy, the president of Motown Records, sent every song he produced immediately to WVON before any other station. Other similar stations across the country took inspiration from WVON's format. The station also had an active role during the Civil Rights Movement, covering it extensively.

After Leonard Chess died in 1969, the Chess family decided to sell WVON to Globetrotter Communications, owned by George Gillette and Potter Palmer. In 1975, Globetrotter bought WNUS-AM-FM from the McLendon interests; they moved WVON from 1450 to the 5,000-watt former WNUS signal on 1390 on February 5 of that year at 3:30 p.m.,[6] which increased WVON's coverage area significantly. The 1450 frequency was left silent for a time; eventually, FM classical music station WFMT was allowed to simulcast on 1450 as an interim operator while the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) evaluated applications for a new license for the frequency.

The FCC process resulted in a shared-time situation on the 1450 frequency, as applicants Midway Broadcasting Corporation and Migala Communications reached an agreement to split the broadcast day. Two former WVON personalities, Pervis Spann and Wesley South, were the principals of Midway Broadcasting. They accepted the random issue call sign WXOL. Migala chose WCEV ("We're Chicagoland's Ethnic Voice") as their call sign. Under the agreement WCEV would operate from 1PM to 10PM Monday through Friday, with WXOL taking the rest of the hours. Both stations were on the air by October 1979; they shared a transmitting tower but used different transmitters and processing chains. the 317 foot tower was located at the old WVON site at 3350 South Kedzie Avenue. WXOL broadcast from studios at that location, while WCEV built its own facilities on the northwest side of Chicago and used phone lines and later 950 MHz S.T.L. to feed the transmitter elsewhere.

Meanwhile, in 1977 Globetrotter sold WVON to Gannett along with WGCI-FM, the former WNUS-FM that Globetrotter had picked up when it acquired the 1390 frequency. WGCI was also programmed to appeal to black audiences, and it and other FM stations won away many of WVON's listeners. WGCI became so successful that Gannett changed the call letters of 1390 from WVON to WGCI(AM) in 1984. Midway Broadcasting immediately filed a request with the FCC to change WXOL's call sign to WVON, thus returning the WVON call letters to their former home at 1450.

In 1986, WVON adopted its current Black-oriented talk radio format.

On September 18, 2006, WVON's call letters and programming moved to 1690 AM, with Midway Broadcasting taking over management of a station on that frequency licensed to Berwyn, Illinois and owned by Clear Channel Communications. The move displaced the oldies format of Clear Channel-operated WRLL on 1690. The WRLL call letters were assigned to Midway's half of the time-share on 1450.

HD programming

WVON is licensed to broadcast a hybrid (analog plus digital) signal on 1690 AM.[7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 50 years of Chicago's WVON: A Chicago voice that echoes nationwide Reich, Howard. Chicago Tribune. March 29, 2013. Accessed December 30, 2013
  2. Columbia College-Inside the Radio Studio with Dick Biondi & Herb Kent-100 Years On the Air-April 10, 2010
  3. Forgotten Hits.com April 2, 2010-transcript of Robert Feder's Chicago Sun-Times column about the event
  4. Herb Kent-Radio Hall of Fame
  5. Kent, Herb; Smallwood, David, eds. (2009), The Cool Gent: The Nine Lives of Radio Legend Herb Kent, Lawrence Hill Books, p. 272, ISBN 1-55652-774-8, retrieved 2010-04-27
  6. Deeb, Gary (February 6, 1975). Chicago Tribune. pp. B10. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. http://www.hdradio.com/stations

External links

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