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WCCR (AM)

WCCR (1260 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, known as "AM 1260 The Rock" and carrying a Catholic–oriented religious format. Owned by St. Peter the Rock Media, Inc., a nonprofit corporation which has applied for 501(c)(3) tax–exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service,[3] WCCR serves Greater Cleveland as the local affiliate for EWTN Radio. WCCR's studios are located in the Cleveland suburb of Broadview Heights and the station transmitter resides in neighboring Brecksville.

WCCR
Broadcast areaGreater Cleveland
Frequency1260 kHz
BrandingAM 1260 The Rock
Programming
FormatReligious (Catholic)
AffiliationsEWTN Radio
Ownership
OwnerSt. Peter the Rock Media, Inc.
History
First air date
April 30, 1950
(74 years ago)
 (1950-04-30)
Former call signs
  • WDOK (1950–1965)
  • WIXY (1965–1976)
  • WMGC (1976–1978)
  • WBBG (1978–1987)
  • WMJI (1987–1988)
  • WRDZ (1988–1995)
  • WMIH (1995–1998)
  • WWMK (1998–2015)
Call sign meaning
"Cleveland Catholic Radio"[1]
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID17015
ClassB
Power
  • 10,000 watts (daytime)
  • 5,000 watts (nighttime)
Transmitter coordinates
41°17′10.00″N 81°38′34.00″W / 41.2861111°N 81.6427778°W / 41.2861111; -81.6427778
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen live
Websiteam1260therock.com

History edit

WDOK edit

The station began on April 30, 1950, as WDOK when Wayne Mack resigned his position at WGAR (1220 AM) to establish the station with Frederick C. Wolf and chief engineer Morris Pierce, who became station president.[4] Wolf himself was a longtime ethnic broadcaster on Cleveland stations WHK, WJAY, and WGAR, in addition to being the founder of Cleveland Recording Co. for the production of spot commercials, nationality music, and auditions.[5]

Early programming was highlighted by Wayne Mack's imaginary concert programs, such as "Hometown Band Concert", "Candlelight Concert", and "Waltz Palace".[4] WDOK's format was soon simulcast full-time on WDOK-FM 102.1. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, the station maintained a format of adult standards, although it did buck contemporary music trends by broadcasting two hours of classical music programming each night. By 1957, WDOK also was the radio home for 18 different nationality programs, most of them broadcast on Sundays. Wolf sold his stake in WDOK and WDOK-FM to Transcontinent Television Corp. of New York in 1962.[5]

Meanwhile, across town in the early 1960s, top–40 radio was flourishing led by KYW and WHK. In July 1964, three account executives at WHK Norman Wain, Bob Weiss, and Joe Zingale – quit their jobs to form Westchester Corporation. They purchased WFAS in White Plains, New York (located in Westchester County, hence Westchester Corporation) in December 1964, and honed their skills in running a top–40 station. They returned to Cleveland the following year and purchased WDOK and WDOK-FM in November 1965.[6]

WIXY 1260 edit

On December 12, 1965, the AM station changed its call sign to WIXY, branding itself as WIXY 1260 (pronounced "Wicksy Twelve-Sixty"). The new call sign was similar to WXYZ in Detroit – and which also used the "Wixie" nickname – and also was selected for its rhyming with the 1260 frequency. The initial on-air lineup included Al Gates, Howie Lund, Johnny Michaels, Johnny Canton, Mark Allen, and Bobby Magic. Allen later moved on to Chicago's WCFL under the name Bob Dearborn. The news staff included Bob Engel, Fred Griffith, and Gary Ritchie.[6]

WIXY soon began to dominate top–40 radio in Cleveland, despite having a weaker signal than either WKYC (formerly KYW) or WHK. In 1966, WIXY sponsored The Beatles' second concert in Cleveland on August 14. (WHK had sponsored the first concert in 1964). DJs who are remembered for their stint at WIXY during the late 1960s and early 1970s include Chuck Dunaway, and Jackson Armstrong (Big Jack Armstrong "Your Leader").

WDOK-FM was, however, left untouched and still programmed by Wayne Mack. When Westchester Corporation saw the growing and devoted listener base that their largely ignored FM station was developing, WDOK was branded "Stereo Cleveland – Beautiful Music for the land of the Western Reserve". While the FM station soon passed over into separate ownership, Wayne Mack stayed at WDOK until 1980, and died in October 2000.

In 1969, Westchester Corporation took the format to the Pittsburgh market, purchasing WMCK in suburban McKeesport, Pennsylvania, and changing the calls to WIXZ. The Pittsburgh-area station used the same graphics and jingles as the Cleveland station – it was called "WIXZ 1360" (pronounced "Wick-zee Thirteen Sixty") – but failed to impact Pittsburgh as it had Cleveland, putting only a dent in the dominance of top–40 leader KQV. The top–40 format at WIXZ lasted in various forms until 1974, and the call letters remained in place until it became talk station WPTT in 1999.

The local ownership of WIXY was gobbled up by larger communications corporations in the 1970s. Wain, Weiss, and Zingale merged Westchester Corporation into Globetrotter Communications for $14.3 million in December 1971. Combined Communications (later Gannett) purchased Globetrotter in May 1975.[6]

"WIXY 1260" exists today as an online tribute station based in the Cleveland area airing the original PAMS jingles and classic 1960s and 1970s hits.[7]

Talk, oldies, big band edit

With the emergence of FM radio, the era of AM top–40 radio drew to a close. On July 19, 1976, WIXY became WMGC (or "Magic"), and the format switched to "adult rock", an early iteration of what would become known as adult contemporary. The station adopted the slogan "Get Your Rock Soft", which raised some eyebrows when it appeared in ads and billboards around town.[6] Although it never caught on with a large audience, WMGC was home to several of the area's top broadcasters, including general manager Dick Conrad, Program Director Jeff Baxter, and DJs Dan Bradford and Lady J. Also on the air as the most popular of the WMGC personalities was Dave Sanderson. In reality, Sanderson was well-known local broadcaster David Mark, who had to assume the Sanderson name due to contractual obligations to WKSW-FM and WEWS-TV.

The adult rock format lasted less than three years. On April 14, 1979, the station became WBBG and switched to talk radio, under the name "SuperTalk 1260". The original lineup included several veteran Cleveland radio personalities Bill Gordon, Merle Pollis, Ted Alexander, Bill Randle, Ed Fisher, Bruce Drennan with Sportstalk, and Cynthia Smith with the overnight program NightFlight 1260.[8]

WBBG's talk format never caught on, so the station turned to an oldies format briefly before finding success with a big band-based music format programmed by local radio veteran Jim Davis. The station enjoyed much success including "Billboard Station of the Year" (for its format) in 1983 with a nomination of "Program Director of the Year" going to Davis. During its glory years (July 1981–October 1987), on-air talent, in addition to Davis, included Al James, Tom Armstrong, Bill Randle, Carl Reese, Ronnie Barrett, Dick Conrad, John Webster, Ted Alexander, Joe Black, and Jack Reynolds.

Ownership of WBBG and sister FM station WWWM passed from Embrescia Communications (led by Tom Embrescia) to Robinson Communications (led by local civic leader and jeweler Larry Robinson) on October 27, 1981. (WWWM's call sign changed to WMJI six months later). Robinson, in turn, sold the stations to media giant Jacor Communications on September 19, 1984.[9]

WBBG's call letters (originally stood for "Boys from Bowling Green")[10] soon took the meaning "Big Band Grandstand". After an attempt by Robinson to repurchase WBBG[11] so that Jacor could buy WWWE[12] collapsed, the big-band format was dumped on October 29, 1987, and Jacor simulcast the air signal of WMJI-FM 105.7 on the AM station.[13] The AM call sign was changed to WMJI on November 24, 1987[14] to match the FM station's (which legally became WMJI-FM for the interim). The big band format - and program director Jim Davis - soon migrated over to crosstown station WRMR.

Later years edit

After a few months of FM simulcasting, Jacor sold the station to Gore-Overgaard Broadcasting (led by Harold W. Gore and Cordell J. Overgaard), a Christian organization brought a format of religious programming and gospel music. The call sign was changed to WRDZ on July 1, 1988.[14] Under Gore-Overgaard ownership, the station received permission to double its daytime power from 5,000 to 10,000 watts, although the upgrade was not accomplished until Divine Mercy Communications, Ltd. purchased and installed the new transmitter provided for in the license change.

 
Logo as WMIH

In early 1995, the station was purchased by Divine Mercy Communications Ltd., and it brought the format of Catholic programming. Under new call letters WMIH (for Mary's Immaculate Heart), which were adopted on February 23, 1995, the station was purported to be the first commercial Catholic radio station in the country.[15]

The station inaugurated its new format on February 22 by broadcasting a noon mass live from St. John's Cathedral celebrated by Bishop Anthony Pilla.[16] Regular programming centered on a live morning drive-time program called Genesis, hosted by Fr. Wally Hyclack and Cleveland broadcast veteran Bob Tayek, which featured NBC Radio news and local newsmaker interviews, and an evening drive program, named "Homeward Bound", with a local call-in format on current topics.

Midday programming included a live, local, two-hour talk show called Ave Maria, a local information and spiritual support program called the Living Word with Cleveland nun Sr. Juanita Sheely, broadcasts of various Catholic speakers, in a program called Catholic Classroom, which included Bishop Fulton J. Sheen's programs from the 1950s. In addition, the station produced live daily mass from St. John's Cathedral and carried regular installments of the English versions of Vatican broadcasts.[16]

WMIH also produced live play-by-play coverage of Saint Ignatius High School football and basketball games, both home and away, as well as live remotes from Cleveland-area Catholic events, such as the Feast of the Assumption in Cleveland's Little Italy. The station also provided its own live, on-location coverage of Pope John Paul II's entire trip to New York and Baltimore in 1995,[17] with coverage anchored by owner Steve Kurdziel and local reports from Cuyahoga County Commissioner Lee Weingart.[18]

Radio Disney AM 1260 edit

Despite the innovative programming produced by WMIH, and the devoted listenership from the Catholic community in Cleveland, Divine Mercy ended up having serious financial trouble in maintaining that original programming, which emphasized local hosts and remote coverage of sports and other events.[19]

At the same time, ABC Radio was looking for an outlet for its Radio Disney in the Cleveland market, and it purchased the station. It took over the station on May 1, 1998,[20] and the call sign was changed to WWMK on December 4.[14]

On August 13, 2014, Disney put WWMK and 22 other Radio Disney stations up for sale, to focus on digital distribution of the Radio Disney network.[21][22]

AM 1260 The Rock edit

On December 24, 2014, the station was sold to St. Peter the Rock Media, a nonprofit company created by former Akron attorney Patrick D'Andrea and Cleveland attorney Gerald Monroe. They announced the station would become an EWTN Radio affiliate,[23] with a Catholic format under the branding AM 1260 The Rock - returning it to its prior format before the Radio Disney buyout. The new ownership group originally targeted April 2015 for the format switch,[24] but later was changed for May.[citation needed] On April 24, 2015, WWMK disaffiliated from Radio Disney, and went silent.[1][25] St. Peter the Rock Media took over the station on May 4, upon consummation of the purchase from Radio Disney at a price of $895,000.[26][27] On May 7, 2015, the station changed the call sign to WCCR and began its new format.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Tom Feran, The Plain Dealer (May 9, 2015). "Radio Disney leaves the air for a very different Rock". cleveland.
  2. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WCCR". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^ Press release (December 31, 2014). . AM1260TheRock.com. St. Peter the Rock Media, Inc. Archived from the original on February 5, 2015. Retrieved April 29, 2015. The corporation, a lay apostolate that seeks to share the message of Jesus Christ and the Catholic Faith, has filed for 501(c)(3) status.
  4. ^ a b WDOK (AM) History, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  5. ^ a b Van Tassel, David D. (1996). John J. Grabowski (ed.). The Dictionary of Cleveland Biography. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 493–494. ISBN 0-253-33055-6. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  6. ^ a b c d WIXY/WMGC History, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  7. ^ "Home". wixy1260online.com.
  8. ^ WBBG History, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  9. ^ WMJI-FM History, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  10. ^ Call Letters, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  11. ^ Dyer, Bob (July 22, 1987). "Larry J.B. Robinson buying WBBG Radio". Akron Beacon Journal. p. B5. Retrieved March 19, 2007.
  12. ^ Dyer, Bob (August 5, 1987). "Modell Reaps Tidy Profit on Radio Stations". Akron Beacon Journal. p. C8. Retrieved March 19, 2007.
  13. ^ Dyer, Bob (October 29, 1987). "WBBG Changing its Tune: Sister Station's Signal Carried". Akron Beacon Journal. p. C14. Retrieved March 19, 2007.
  14. ^ a b c Call Sign History for WCCR, from FCC'S AM station database. Retrieved January 1, 2007. Note that it only goes back to WMJI (AM).
  15. ^ Santiago, Roberto (October 29, 1994). "Station going Catholic". The Plain Dealer. p. 10E. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  16. ^ a b WMIH History, Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  17. ^ Brown, Roger (September 27, 1995). "Focus helps keep WZJM jamming". The Plain Dealer. p. 5E. Retrieved January 7, 2007.
  18. ^ "Local GOP gets Wires Crossed". Perspective. October 8, 1995. p. 3C. Retrieved January 7, 2007.
  19. ^ Brown, Roger (October 13, 1997). "Buying Frenzy to Begin for Top Stations". The Plain Dealer. p. 6E. Retrieved March 18, 2007.
  20. ^ Santiago, Roberto (May 11, 1998). "FCC May say Six Stations are too Many for Jacor". The Plain Dealer. p. 3E. Retrieved March 18, 2007.
  21. ^ Lafayette, Jon (August 13, 2014). "Exclusive: Radio Disney Moving Off Air to Digital". Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  22. ^ "Radio Disney to Sell the Majority of Its Stations". Billboard. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  23. ^ "EWTN affiliation - AM 1260 The Rock.com".
  24. ^ "Disney Sells WWMK Cleveland - RadioInsight".
  25. ^ "Notification of Suspension of Operations / Request for Silent STA". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved May 1, 2015.
  26. ^ "History | AM 1260 The Rock". December 16, 2014.
  27. ^ "Consummation Notice". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
  28. ^ "Call Sign History - Federal Communications Commission".

Further reading edit

  • Morrow, Larry (2010). This is Larry Morrow. Cleveland, OH: Gray & Company, Publishers. ISBN 9781598510690
  • Olszewski, Mike (2011). WIXY 1260: Pixies, Six-packs, and Supermen. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9781606350997
  • Wolff, Carlo (2006). Cleveland Rock and Roll Memories. Cleveland, OH: Gray & Company, Publishers. ISBN 9781886228993

External links edit

  • Official website
  • WCCR in the FCC AM station database
  • WCCR in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History Cards for WCCR
  • WIXY1260.com
  • WIXY1260online.com

wccr, wccr, 1260, commercial, radio, station, licensed, cleveland, ohio, known, 1260, rock, carrying, catholic, oriented, religious, format, owned, peter, rock, media, nonprofit, corporation, which, applied, exempt, status, with, internal, revenue, service, wc. WCCR 1260 AM is a commercial radio station licensed to Cleveland Ohio known as AM 1260 The Rock and carrying a Catholic oriented religious format Owned by St Peter the Rock Media Inc a nonprofit corporation which has applied for 501 c 3 tax exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service 3 WCCR serves Greater Cleveland as the local affiliate for EWTN Radio WCCR s studios are located in the Cleveland suburb of Broadview Heights and the station transmitter resides in neighboring Brecksville WCCRCleveland OhioBroadcast areaGreater ClevelandFrequency1260 kHzBrandingAM 1260 The RockProgrammingFormatReligious Catholic AffiliationsEWTN RadioOwnershipOwnerSt Peter the Rock Media Inc HistoryFirst air dateApril 30 1950 74 years ago 1950 04 30 Former call signsWDOK 1950 1965 WIXY 1965 1976 WMGC 1976 1978 WBBG 1978 1987 WMJI 1987 1988 WRDZ 1988 1995 WMIH 1995 1998 WWMK 1998 2015 Call sign meaning Cleveland Catholic Radio 1 Technical information 2 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID17015ClassBPower10 000 watts daytime 5 000 watts nighttime Transmitter coordinates41 17 10 00 N 81 38 34 00 W 41 2861111 N 81 6427778 W 41 2861111 81 6427778LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen liveWebsiteam1260therock wbr com Contents 1 History 1 1 WDOK 1 2 WIXY 1260 1 3 Talk oldies big band 1 4 Later years 1 5 Radio Disney AM 1260 1 6 AM 1260 The Rock 2 References 3 Further reading 4 External linksHistory editWDOK edit Not to be confused with Cleveland FM radio station WDOK The station began on April 30 1950 as WDOK when Wayne Mack resigned his position at WGAR 1220 AM to establish the station with Frederick C Wolf and chief engineer Morris Pierce who became station president 4 Wolf himself was a longtime ethnic broadcaster on Cleveland stations WHK WJAY and WGAR in addition to being the founder of Cleveland Recording Co for the production of spot commercials nationality music and auditions 5 Early programming was highlighted by Wayne Mack s imaginary concert programs such as Hometown Band Concert Candlelight Concert and Waltz Palace 4 WDOK s format was soon simulcast full time on WDOK FM 102 1 Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s the station maintained a format of adult standards although it did buck contemporary music trends by broadcasting two hours of classical music programming each night By 1957 WDOK also was the radio home for 18 different nationality programs most of them broadcast on Sundays Wolf sold his stake in WDOK and WDOK FM to Transcontinent Television Corp of New York in 1962 5 Meanwhile across town in the early 1960s top 40 radio was flourishing led by KYW and WHK In July 1964 three account executives at WHK Norman Wain Bob Weiss and Joe Zingale quit their jobs to form Westchester Corporation They purchased WFAS in White Plains New York located in Westchester County hence Westchester Corporation in December 1964 and honed their skills in running a top 40 station They returned to Cleveland the following year and purchased WDOK and WDOK FM in November 1965 6 WIXY 1260 edit On December 12 1965 the AM station changed its call sign to WIXY branding itself as WIXY 1260 pronounced Wicksy Twelve Sixty The new call sign was similar to WXYZ in Detroit and which also used the Wixie nickname and also was selected for its rhyming with the 1260 frequency The initial on air lineup included Al Gates Howie Lund Johnny Michaels Johnny Canton Mark Allen and Bobby Magic Allen later moved on to Chicago s WCFL under the name Bob Dearborn The news staff included Bob Engel Fred Griffith and Gary Ritchie 6 WIXY soon began to dominate top 40 radio in Cleveland despite having a weaker signal than either WKYC formerly KYW or WHK In 1966 WIXY sponsored The Beatles second concert in Cleveland on August 14 WHK had sponsored the first concert in 1964 DJs who are remembered for their stint at WIXY during the late 1960s and early 1970s include Chuck Dunaway and Jackson Armstrong Big Jack Armstrong Your Leader WDOK FM was however left untouched and still programmed by Wayne Mack When Westchester Corporation saw the growing and devoted listener base that their largely ignored FM station was developing WDOK was branded Stereo Cleveland Beautiful Music for the land of the Western Reserve While the FM station soon passed over into separate ownership Wayne Mack stayed at WDOK until 1980 and died in October 2000 In 1969 Westchester Corporation took the format to the Pittsburgh market purchasing WMCK in suburban McKeesport Pennsylvania and changing the calls to WIXZ The Pittsburgh area station used the same graphics and jingles as the Cleveland station it was called WIXZ 1360 pronounced Wick zee Thirteen Sixty but failed to impact Pittsburgh as it had Cleveland putting only a dent in the dominance of top 40 leader KQV The top 40 format at WIXZ lasted in various forms until 1974 and the call letters remained in place until it became talk station WPTT in 1999 The local ownership of WIXY was gobbled up by larger communications corporations in the 1970s Wain Weiss and Zingale merged Westchester Corporation into Globetrotter Communications for 14 3 million in December 1971 Combined Communications later Gannett purchased Globetrotter in May 1975 6 WIXY 1260 exists today as an online tribute station based in the Cleveland area airing the original PAMS jingles and classic 1960s and 1970s hits 7 Talk oldies big band edit With the emergence of FM radio the era of AM top 40 radio drew to a close On July 19 1976 WIXY became WMGC or Magic and the format switched to adult rock an early iteration of what would become known as adult contemporary The station adopted the slogan Get Your Rock Soft which raised some eyebrows when it appeared in ads and billboards around town 6 Although it never caught on with a large audience WMGC was home to several of the area s top broadcasters including general manager Dick Conrad Program Director Jeff Baxter and DJs Dan Bradford and Lady J Also on the air as the most popular of the WMGC personalities was Dave Sanderson In reality Sanderson was well known local broadcaster David Mark who had to assume the Sanderson name due to contractual obligations to WKSW FM and WEWS TV The adult rock format lasted less than three years On April 14 1979 the station became WBBG and switched to talk radio under the name SuperTalk 1260 The original lineup included several veteran Cleveland radio personalities Bill Gordon Merle Pollis Ted Alexander Bill Randle Ed Fisher Bruce Drennan with Sportstalk and Cynthia Smith with the overnight program NightFlight 1260 8 WBBG s talk format never caught on so the station turned to an oldies format briefly before finding success with a big band based music format programmed by local radio veteran Jim Davis The station enjoyed much success including Billboard Station of the Year for its format in 1983 with a nomination of Program Director of the Year going to Davis During its glory years July 1981 October 1987 on air talent in addition to Davis included Al James Tom Armstrong Bill Randle Carl Reese Ronnie Barrett Dick Conrad John Webster Ted Alexander Joe Black and Jack Reynolds Ownership of WBBG and sister FM station WWWM passed from Embrescia Communications led by Tom Embrescia to Robinson Communications led by local civic leader and jeweler Larry Robinson on October 27 1981 WWWM s call sign changed to WMJI six months later Robinson in turn sold the stations to media giant Jacor Communications on September 19 1984 9 WBBG s call letters originally stood for Boys from Bowling Green 10 soon took the meaning Big Band Grandstand After an attempt by Robinson to repurchase WBBG 11 so that Jacor could buy WWWE 12 collapsed the big band format was dumped on October 29 1987 and Jacor simulcast the air signal of WMJI FM 105 7 on the AM station 13 The AM call sign was changed to WMJI on November 24 1987 14 to match the FM station s which legally became WMJI FM for the interim The big band format and program director Jim Davis soon migrated over to crosstown station WRMR Later years edit After a few months of FM simulcasting Jacor sold the station to Gore Overgaard Broadcasting led by Harold W Gore and Cordell J Overgaard a Christian organization brought a format of religious programming and gospel music The call sign was changed to WRDZ on July 1 1988 14 Under Gore Overgaard ownership the station received permission to double its daytime power from 5 000 to 10 000 watts although the upgrade was not accomplished until Divine Mercy Communications Ltd purchased and installed the new transmitter provided for in the license change nbsp Logo as WMIHIn early 1995 the station was purchased by Divine Mercy Communications Ltd and it brought the format of Catholic programming Under new call letters WMIH for Mary s Immaculate Heart which were adopted on February 23 1995 the station was purported to be the first commercial Catholic radio station in the country 15 The station inaugurated its new format on February 22 by broadcasting a noon mass live from St John s Cathedral celebrated by Bishop Anthony Pilla 16 Regular programming centered on a live morning drive time program called Genesis hosted by Fr Wally Hyclack and Cleveland broadcast veteran Bob Tayek which featured NBC Radio news and local newsmaker interviews and an evening drive program named Homeward Bound with a local call in format on current topics Midday programming included a live local two hour talk show called Ave Maria a local information and spiritual support program called the Living Word with Cleveland nun Sr Juanita Sheely broadcasts of various Catholic speakers in a program called Catholic Classroom which included Bishop Fulton J Sheen s programs from the 1950s In addition the station produced live daily mass from St John s Cathedral and carried regular installments of the English versions of Vatican broadcasts 16 WMIH also produced live play by play coverage of Saint Ignatius High School football and basketball games both home and away as well as live remotes from Cleveland area Catholic events such as the Feast of the Assumption in Cleveland s Little Italy The station also provided its own live on location coverage of Pope John Paul II s entire trip to New York and Baltimore in 1995 17 with coverage anchored by owner Steve Kurdziel and local reports from Cuyahoga County Commissioner Lee Weingart 18 Radio Disney AM 1260 edit Despite the innovative programming produced by WMIH and the devoted listenership from the Catholic community in Cleveland Divine Mercy ended up having serious financial trouble in maintaining that original programming which emphasized local hosts and remote coverage of sports and other events 19 At the same time ABC Radio was looking for an outlet for its Radio Disney in the Cleveland market and it purchased the station It took over the station on May 1 1998 20 and the call sign was changed to WWMK on December 4 14 On August 13 2014 Disney put WWMK and 22 other Radio Disney stations up for sale to focus on digital distribution of the Radio Disney network 21 22 AM 1260 The Rock edit On December 24 2014 the station was sold to St Peter the Rock Media a nonprofit company created by former Akron attorney Patrick D Andrea and Cleveland attorney Gerald Monroe They announced the station would become an EWTN Radio affiliate 23 with a Catholic format under the branding AM 1260 The Rock returning it to its prior format before the Radio Disney buyout The new ownership group originally targeted April 2015 for the format switch 24 but later was changed for May citation needed On April 24 2015 WWMK disaffiliated from Radio Disney and went silent 1 25 St Peter the Rock Media took over the station on May 4 upon consummation of the purchase from Radio Disney at a price of 895 000 26 27 On May 7 2015 the station changed the call sign to WCCR and began its new format 28 References edit a b Tom Feran The Plain Dealer May 9 2015 Radio Disney leaves the air for a very different Rock cleveland Facility Technical Data for WCCR Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Press release December 31 2014 Cleveland Catholic radio group acquires 1260 AM AM1260TheRock com St Peter the Rock Media Inc Archived from the original on February 5 2015 Retrieved April 29 2015 The corporation a lay apostolate that seeks to share the message of Jesus Christ and the Catholic Faith has filed for 501 c 3 status a b WDOK AM History Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 a b Van Tassel David D 1996 John J Grabowski ed The Dictionary of Cleveland Biography Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 493 494 ISBN 0 253 33055 6 Retrieved January 1 2007 a b c d WIXY WMGC History Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 Home wixy1260online com WBBG History Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 WMJI FM History Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 Call Letters Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 Dyer Bob July 22 1987 Larry J B Robinson buying WBBG Radio Akron Beacon Journal p B5 Retrieved March 19 2007 Dyer Bob August 5 1987 Modell Reaps Tidy Profit on Radio Stations Akron Beacon Journal p C8 Retrieved March 19 2007 Dyer Bob October 29 1987 WBBG Changing its Tune Sister Station s Signal Carried Akron Beacon Journal p C14 Retrieved March 19 2007 a b c Call Sign History for WCCR from FCC S AM station database Retrieved January 1 2007 Note that it only goes back to WMJI AM Santiago Roberto October 29 1994 Station going Catholic The Plain Dealer p 10E Retrieved January 1 2007 a b WMIH History Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Project Retrieved January 1 2007 Brown Roger September 27 1995 Focus helps keep WZJM jamming The Plain Dealer p 5E Retrieved January 7 2007 Local GOP gets Wires Crossed Perspective October 8 1995 p 3C Retrieved January 7 2007 Brown Roger October 13 1997 Buying Frenzy to Begin for Top Stations The Plain Dealer p 6E Retrieved March 18 2007 Santiago Roberto May 11 1998 FCC May say Six Stations are too Many for Jacor The Plain Dealer p 3E Retrieved March 18 2007 Lafayette Jon August 13 2014 Exclusive Radio Disney Moving Off Air to Digital Retrieved August 13 2014 Radio Disney to Sell the Majority of Its Stations Billboard Retrieved August 13 2014 EWTN affiliation AM 1260 The Rock com Disney Sells WWMK Cleveland RadioInsight Notification of Suspension of Operations Request for Silent STA CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved May 1 2015 History AM 1260 The Rock December 16 2014 Consummation Notice CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved May 5 2015 Call Sign History Federal Communications Commission Further reading editMorrow Larry 2010 This is Larry Morrow Cleveland OH Gray amp Company Publishers ISBN 9781598510690 Olszewski Mike 2011 WIXY 1260 Pixies Six packs and Supermen Kent OH Kent State University Press ISBN 9781606350997 Wolff Carlo 2006 Cleveland Rock and Roll Memories Cleveland OH Gray amp Company Publishers ISBN 9781886228993External links editOfficial website WCCR in the FCC AM station database WCCR in Nielsen Audio s AM station database FCC History Cards for WCCR WIXY1260 com WIXY1260online com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WCCR AM amp oldid 1214450809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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