WWRC

For the railroad, see Wilmington and Western Railroad. For the wheelchair rugby championship, see World Wheelchair Rugby Championships. For the TV channel, see WRC-TV.
WWRC
City Washington, D.C.
Broadcast area Metro Washington
Branding "1260 The Answer"
Slogan "News. Intelligent Talk. Insight."
Frequency 1260 kHz
Repeater(s) 1250 WRCW Warrenton, VA
First air date November 11, 1928
Format News/talk
Power 25,000 watts day
5,000 watts night
Class B
Facility ID 8681
Callsign meaning W-"Washington-Radio Corporation of America"
(founders of the original WRC)
Former callsigns 1999–2001: WGAY
1950–1999: WWDC
1928–1950: WOL
Owner Salem Communications
(Salem Media of Virginia, Inc.)
Sister stations WAVA, WAVA-FM, WRCW
Webcast WWRC Webstream
Website WWRC Online

WWRC (1260 AM)—branded 1260 The Answer—is a news/talk radio station licensed to Washington, D.C. that serves the Washington metro area. It operates with 25,000 watts during the day and 5,000 watts at night with studios and transmitters both located in the city proper. The station is owned and operated by Salem Communications.

In December 2012 WWRC was granted a U.S. Federal Communications Commission construction permit to increase day power to 35,000 watts.

History

Fred Fiske and Gale Garnett in 1964.

The station was the original home of WOL, and signed on in 1928. A station/callsign swap with WWDC (1450 AM) on February 20, 1950 landed the WWDC call letters on 1260 kHz for the rest of the century. During the 1960s, radio personalities such as Jimmy Dean and Fred Fiske had programs on this station. The format was middle-of-the-road. It staked out a place in radio and music history by being the first American radio station to play a Beatles song when it played "I Want to Hold Your Hand" in December 1963.[1]

During the 1970s, WWDC was a moderately popular Top 40 station. In 1981, the station began simulcast of the morning and afternoon drive shows on sister FM Rock station WWDC-FM ("DC101"), with separate shows in the same music format during other dayparts. A few years later, it broke off the simulcast and became an Adult Standards station.

WWDC changed its call letters to WGAY in 1999, following the dropping of the long-time beautiful music format that was WGAY-FM (which became WJMO-FM and then WIHT). WGAY kept its adult standards format nonetheless until Clear Channel Communications bought the station with the AMFM merger in 2000. In 2001, the standards format was dropped, and the business news format and WWRC callsign were moved from 570 AM to 1260 AM. Still, there were difficulties finding a format for the station that was different from the other Clear Channel stations in the Washington metropolitan area.

Until 2005, the station carried the business talk format, a full-time audio relay of CNN Headline News, and sports talk programming (as "Sports Talk 1260", a supplement to sister station WTEM), then switched to progressive talk and became an Air America Radio affiliate. Hosts under the station's progressive talk format included Lionel, Stephanie Miller, Ed Schultz, Bill Press, Rachel Maddow and Ron Reagan.

While the progressive format suffered from low ratings (The Washington Post reported its ratings in December 2006 as being "an almost imperceptible audience"),[2] WWRC booked a .4 rating in Summer 2008 and a .1 rating in Winter 2008.

Red Zebra Broadcasting purchased WWRC, WTEM and WWRC from Clear Channel in a deal announced in 2008.[3]

On September 15, 2008, WWRC was branded as "Obama 1260" while maintaining its progressive talk format, plus news coverage from CNN and CNBC. The temporary branding was a stunt coinciding with conservative-oriented sister station WTNT (branded "McCain 570"), and was expected to last throughout the 2008 Presidential Election.[4] While WTNT was re-branded "Freedom 570" right after the election, WWRC retained its Obama 1260 branding beyond Illinois senator Barack Obama's Presidential inauguration on January 20, 2009.

In January 2009, WWRC launched its new website http://www.obama1260.com/ (the domain expired September 11, 2009). However, The Washington Post reported on February 2, 2009, that the station would be changing to a business talk format the following week (although the Ed Schultz Show was moved to sister station WTNT, he would eventually be dropped from that station's lineup).[5]

Starting on February 9, 2009, WWRC broadcast a syndicated business talk format under the brand, "Money 1260." Chiefly an outlet for the Business Talk Radio Network, the station also carried Ray Lucia and Clark Howard.

WWRC was sold to Salem Communications in April 2010.[6] Upon taking control on May 15 (initially via a local marketing agreement before completing its purchase on August 3), Salem relaunched the station with its conservative talk format, again reviving the "WRC" branding as "1260 WRC."[7]

Prior to Salem's purchase of WWRC, the station aired Washington Redskins & Notre Dame football games as an affiliate station. WWRC also had carried sports broadcasts dislodged from WTEM and WTNT by schedule conflicts.

In late October 2014, carried a series of promos alluding to a rebranding to occur after the 2014 midterm elections. The rebranding took place on November 4, 2014, with the station taking Salem's common major-market branding of "The Answer" as "1260 The Answer", though no personalities were shifted around or removed.

References

  1. CBS (2004-01-16). "Beatles' 'Helping Hand' Shuns Fame: Fab Four Fan Want To Find Teen Who Helped Launched Beatlemania". CBS News. Retrieved 2006-09-21.
  2. Fisher, Marc (December 10, 2006). "Air America, in the Throes of Victory?". The Washington Post.
  3. "Deals," Broadcasting & Cable, June 16, 2008.
  4. "Red Zebra does "Obama 1260" and "McCain 570"". Radio-Info.com. September 15, 2008.
  5. Kurtz, Howard (2009-02-02). "Liberal Flameout". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-10-22.
  6. "Red Zebra sells D.C.'s "Money 1260" WWRC to Salem". Radio-Info.com. April 17, 2010. Retrieved April 17, 2010.
  7. "Salem adds AM in Washington DC". Radio Business Report. April 22, 2010. Retrieved April 25, 2010.

External links

Coordinates: 38°59′59″N 77°03′27″W / 38.99972°N 77.05750°W / 38.99972; -77.05750

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