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WFED

WFED (1500 AM) is a 50,000-watt Class A radio station in the Washington, D.C. region. The station, branded as "Federal News Network", broadcasts a news talk format focused on issues and news pertaining to members and staff of the United States government. Owned by Hubbard Broadcasting, the current WFED is the second in the Washington area to carry the Federal News Network format as WFED, as from 2004 until a transfer in 2008, this format and related call letters were used by a Silver Spring, Maryland station broadcasting on 1050 kHz.

WFED
Broadcast areaWashington, D.C.
Frequency1500 kHz
BrandingFederal News Network
Programming
FormatNews talk
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WBQH, WTOP-FM/WWWT-FM
History
First air date
1926; 97 years ago (1926)
Former call signs
  • WTRC (1926–27)
  • WTFF (1927–29)
  • WJSV (1929–43)
  • WTOP (1943–2006)
  • WTWP (2006–07)
  • WWWT (2007–08)
Former frequencies
  • 1250 kHz (1927)
  • 1470 kHz (1927)
  • 1480 kHz (1927–28)
  • 1460 kHz (1928–41)
Call sign meaning
"Federal News Radio"
Technical information
Facility ID74120
ClassA
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
39°2′31″N 77°2′47″W / 39.04194°N 77.04639°W / 39.04194; -77.04639 (WFED)
Translator(s)104.5 W283DG (Sterling, Virginia)
Links
WebcastListen live
Websitefederalnewsnetwork.com

WFED's studios are located at Hubbard's broadcast complex in northwest Washington, while its transmitter site is located at a three-tower array in Wheaton, Maryland. The station transmits fulltime with a power of 50,000 watts. A single transmitter tower, with a non-directional signal, is used during the day, providing at least secondary coverage to large portions of Maryland (including Baltimore) and Virginia.[1] At night, all three towers are used for a directional pattern, that mutually protects KSTP in St. Paul, Minnesota. This results in areas of Northern Virginia getting only marginal coverage at best.[2] Even with this restriction, WFED's signal can be heard across most of the eastern half of North America with a good radio.[citation needed]

WFED became a Primary Entry Point station for the Emergency Alert System in 2014.[3] In 2006, the station began broadcasting in digital "HD Radio".

Programming Edit

WFED's weekday programming consists primarily of original news and talk content for federal government employees, the Senior Executive Service, and contractors. While most of this airs on a daily basis, various programming is rotated in the midday hours. This programming, in the past, has included several Voice of America programs, including Issues in the News, Press Conference USA, and Our World. Most weekend programming is a mix of brokered programming and replays of weekday programming.[citation needed]

WFED is the flagship station for George Washington Colonials basketball. It also carries selected Navy Midshipmen football, basketball and lacrosse games as an affiliate station. WFED is also the flagship station of the Washington Wizards.[4] The station is a Capitals' network affiliate station,[5] which allowed fans up and down the East Coast to hear the Capitals' run to the 2018 Stanley Cup Finals.

History Edit

Establishment in Brooklyn, New York Edit

The station was first licensed on September 25, 1926, as WTRC, to the Twentieth Assembly District Regular Republican Club, Inc., 62 Woodbine Street in Brooklyn, New York.[6] It was established during a chaotic period when most government regulation had been suspended, with new stations free to be set up with few restrictions.[7] As of the end of 1926, WTRC was reported to be at 1250 kHz, with a power of 50 watts.[8] In March 1927, government oversight of radio stations was reestablished, with the formation of the Federal Radio Commission (FRC).

Move south Edit

On August 2, 1927, the station's owner was changed to the Independent Publishing Company, the call sign was changed to WTFF, reflecting its affiliation with The Fellowship Forum newspaper, in addition to a relocation to Mount Vernon Hills, Virginia, a southern suburb of Washington, D.C. In the fall of 1928, the call sign was changed to WJSV,[9] the initials of the Fellowship Forum publisher, James S. Vance, who was controversial due to ties he and his newspaper had to the Ku Klux Klan. On November 11, 1928, under the provisions of a major national reallocation by the FRC's General Order 40, WTFF was assigned to a "high-powered regional" frequency of 1460 kHz, with a power of 10,000 watts. The only other station assigned to this frequency was KSTP in Saint Paul, Minnesota.[10]

 
In 1932 the Columbia Broadcasting System assumed control of WJSV[11]

In late 1931, the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) applied to construct a 250 watt "booster" station in Washington, retransmitting the signal of its New York City station, however this request was denied by the FRC.[12] As an alternative, CBS next made arrangements to lease WJSV, and took over all of WJSV's programming and engineering costs, with an option to renew or purchase the station after five years. This resulted in the transfer of the local CBS network affiliation from WMAL to WJSV.[13] CBS also moved the transmitter site to Potomac Yards in Alexandria to boost power and improve the coverage pattern.

In June 1932, CBS exercised its option to purchase WJSV outright, and moved its operations to Alexandria, Virginia. After three months off the air, WJSV resumed broadcasting on October 20, 1932.[13] In 1936, with the elimination of the jurisdictional quotas that had been imposed by the Davis Amendment, the station's studios were moved from Alexandria to the Earle Building in Washington.[14] On September 21, 1939, WJSV recorded its entire broadcast day for posterity. The WJSV broadcast day recordings still exist and copies can be found at the Internet Archive and various old time radio websites.

Arthur Godfrey, who later hosted a variety program on CBS Radio and CBS Television, hosted a program on WJSV called The Sundial on which he honed a laid-back, conversational style that was unusual on radio at the time. WJSV was also a key training ground for pioneering newsman Bob Trout in the 1930s before he became a network correspondent. (One of his broadcasting mentors was Wells (Ted) Church, who later became a CBS News executive.) Longtime Los Angeles-area TV newscaster George Putnam worked at WJSV in 1938 and continued to work in radio for seven decades until his death in 2008. Frank Blair, who later became an NBC News correspondent and later was a long time news anchor on the Today show during the 1960s and early 1970s, worked at WJSV. John Daly, longtime host of game show "What's My Line?" and 1950's anchor on ABC-TV news, also got his start on WJSV.

1940s Edit

 
In 1943 the station's call letters were changed to WTOP[15]

In 1940, power was increased to 50,000 watts from a new transmitter site in Wheaton, Maryland. In March 1941, as part of the implementation of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement, the station was assigned to its current "clear channel" frequency of 1500 kHz, with the provision that it and KSTP, both "Class I-B" stations, had to maintain directional antennas at night in order to mutually protect each other from interference.[16]

The station's call letters were changed from WJSV to WTOP on April 4, 1943. The new call sign was selected to be easier to remember. In addition, at this time the highest AM band frequency in the U.S. was 1500 kHz, so the new call sign reflected the station's position near "the top of the dial" on radio receivers.[17]

CBS sold 55 percent majority control of WTOP to The Washington Post in February 1949; this deal was made so CBS could acquire full control of KQW in San Francisco.[18] As part of the transaction, The Post divested WINX (1340 AM), but retained WINX-FM, which was renamed WTOP-FM, through a legal maneuver.[19] The Post took over the remainder of WTOP in December 1954.

1960s and 1970s: All-news Edit

After its signature personality Arthur Godfrey left WTOP in 1948 to concentrate on his television and midday network radio shows, the station gradually faded in popularity as it faced competition from the Washington Star's WMAL with the morning team of Harden and Weaver, and NBC-owned WRC which featured future Today Show personality Willard Scott. In the 1960s, after a series of failed music formats, WTOP phased out its music programming for a combination of newscasts and phone-in talk shows.

A switch to all-news – at first only during the week – came in March 1969.[20] Among those working for WTOP during this time were Sam Donaldson, later on ABC-TV; Jim Bohannon, who took Larry King's place on his all-night radio network talk show after King went to CNN; and including Ralph Begleiter and Jamie MacIntyre, both of whom went to CNN.

WTOP studios were apparently a critical link in Emergency Broadcast System activation scenarios during the Cold War era.[21]

In 1971 the Post donated the original WTOP-FM at 96.3 MHz to Howard University, in order to "stimulate the intellectual and cultural life of the whole community and to train more people for the communications industry". On December 6, 1971, this station changed its call letters to WHUR-FM.

The Post sold WTOP to The Outlet Company in June 1978, in reaction to the FCC's concerns that common ownership of newspapers and broadcasting outlets in the same city was an unhealthy consolidation of local media. One month later, WTOP-TV was swapped with the Detroit News's WWJ-TV, and became WDVM-TV. The station is today WUSA-TV, owned by Tegna.

1990s–2020s Edit

Outlet re-organized and sold WTOP to Chase Broadcasting in 1989, who in turn sold it to Evergreen Media (which eventually became Chancellor Broadcasting) in November 1992. In April 1997, Evergreen's newly acquired 94.3 MHz facility in Warrenton, Virginia, began simulcasting the WTOP signal for better coverage in the sprawling Northern Virginia suburbs. Shortly afterward, on October 10, 1997, Bonneville International Corporation purchased WTOP.

On April 1, 1998, 94.3 was swapped for a stronger signal at 107.7, also licensed to Warrenton. (The 94.3 facility is now K-Love station WLZV.) Then in December 2000, WTOP gained another simulcast in Frederick, Maryland, with WXTR at 820 kHz, establishing the "WTOP Radio Network", a name it used until 2006.[22]

Over its first three decades, WTOP commonly broke the all-news format for sports – including, at various times, the Washington Capitals, Washington Bullets/Wizards, and Baltimore Orioles – and, in its early years, overnight and weekend talk shows. As listeners increasingly indicated a desire for uninterrupted news, this programming dwindled over the years; WTOP completed the transition to 24/7 news when it dropped the Orioles in 1999.[20]

In 2005, the station began providing podcasts of selected broadcast programs, and in 2006, WTOP began broadcasting in digital "HD Radio", utilizing iBiquity Digital Corp.'s IBOC (in-band on-channel) technology. When AP All News Radio was terminated, the station began an affiliation with CNN Headline News, which itself was phased out in 2007 by provider Westwood One.

On January 4, 2006, Bonneville International announced that WTOP would move to a new primary frequency of 103.5 FM, then held by classical station WGMS (which would move to 103.9 and 104.1 FM). WTOP's longtime facility at 1500 AM, as well as both FM translators (107.7 in Warrenton and low-powered 104.3 in Leesburg), would be reassigned to the new "Washington Post Radio" for a March 30, 2006 launch date. This new partnership meant the Post's was reacquiring the station it had previously operated as WTOP. The station has been dominant in the 25-54 demographics since moving to FM. The stations' respective call signs were changed as of January 11, 2006: the former WTOP pair became WTWP (The Washington Post) and WTOP's new primary stations assumed the WTOP calls.

WTWP: "Washington Post Radio" Edit

The current WFED, along with WWFD, WWWT-FM and W282BA, were former frequencies and simulcasts of WTOP. On March 30, 2006, WTOP transitioned entirely to FM, with 1500 AM (previously the main frequency) and 107.7 becoming "Washington Post Radio" under the calls WTWP and WTWP-FM, respectively. The historic WTOP call sign was transferred for a year to a station on 820 AM in Frederick, Maryland, which switched to a Washington Post Radio simulcast on June 28, 2007. WWWT-FM had operated as a simulcast of WTOP since 1998. WWFD had simulcast WTOP since 2000 (and carried the WTOP calls on the AM band following the sign-on of WTWP) before switching to a simulcast of WTWP as WTWT on June 28, 2007.

As WTWP, these stations provided news and commentary during the weekday hours in a long-form style similar to that of National Public Radio, but on a commercial station staffed and programmed jointly by the Washington Post and WTOP. From 8 PM to 5 AM ET, the station was programmed as a general interest talk radio station, featuring hosts such as Clark Howard, Larry King and Jim Bohannon. On weekends, WTWP rebroadcast programs produced by Radio Netherlands and George Washington University.

WWWT: "Talk Radio 3WT" Edit

The Washington Post reported that they would discontinue the Washington Post Radio service after Bonneville decided to pull the plug, citing financial losses and low ratings.[23]

Bonneville International officially launched personality driven talk format Talk Radio 3WT, with the WWWT call letters on September 20, 2007 (with 820 using the call letters WWWB). The call letters stood for "Whatever We Want" talk radio from the station's imaging. The morning show with David Burd and Jessica Doyle was retained along with all live sporting events, The Tony Kornheiser Show and automotive commentator Pat Goss. Syndicated talkers Neal Boortz, Bill O'Reilly, Randi Rhodes and Phil Hendrie were initially added to the lineup, as was a simulcast of sister station KSL's Nightside with Michael Castner overnight program. Stephanie Miller was added in November after the Washington Nationals' season ended, and Glenn Beck was added, replacing Randi Rhodes on the 1500 and 107.7 frequencies, in January 2008. [verification needed] WWWT was one of the few talk stations in America, at least in major markets, in which the lineup was nearly equally divided among liberal and conservative hosts.

Like WTWP, WWWT remained a member of the CBS Radio Network, and retransmitted the audio portion of the CBS television shows Face the Nation and 60 Minutes. Also surviving the change in format were Larry King and Jim Bohannon, who were carried in the late-night time slots, although King's show was phased out (as part of a nationwide phaseout of all CNN television simulcasts) by Westwood One in 2008.

WFED: "Federal News Network" Edit

The Federal News Network format was launched by Bonneville International, as FederalNewsRadio.com—the first Internet-only all news station, and the first Internet station to make the jump to terrestrial radio—on February 22, 2000. In 2004 the network began being carried on a radio station, initially on a Silver Spring, Maryland station broadcasting on 1050 kHz, which was assigned the call letters WFED. In November 2007, this original WFED increased its daytime power from 1 kW to 3.5 kW in order to better reach the government office workers in Washington, D.C. comprising its core audience. However, its nighttime coverage was severely limited, as it had to reduce power to an all-but-unlistenable 44 watts at sunset.

 
"Federal News Radio" logo from 2011 through 2018

On August 11, 2008, Bonneville announced the discontinuation of 3WT, and the transfer of the Federal News Radio programming and WFED call letters to AM 1500. This move to the capital's most powerful AM facility resulted in significantly improved daytime and especially nighttme coverage. WWWT-FM began simulcasting WTOP-FM (which kept its two other frequencies), while WFED took over WWWT and WWWB's signals. August 11 was the last day for the morning show, The Inner Loop, with David Burd and his team.

For some time before then, WTOP had significant listenership among federal employees, and many of them had emailed the station asking for more coverage tailored to federal employees. The programming concept has changed little to this day, except that the Associated Press' All News Radio service originally filled in during the overnight hours, as a complement to WTOP.

Sports that had been broadcast on 3WT continued on 1500 kHz and 820 kHz. The stations remained the flagships of Washington Nationals baseball until 2011, when the team changed its primary station to WJFK-FM.[24]

Bonneville announced the sale of WFED and WWFD, as well as 15 other stations, to Hubbard Broadcasting on January 19, 2011; this put WFED under common ownership with KSTP, Hubbard's St. Paul, Minnesota station, which was the other clear-channel station on 1500 kHz.[25][26] The sale was completed on April 29, 2011.[27]

WFED was dropped as the flagship of the Washington Nationals Radio Network in favor of WJFK-FM in 2011, but remained as an affiliate station through the 2020 season, allowing the Nationals' run to the 2019 World Series to be heard along most of the East Coast at night. WJFK-FM also replaced WFED as the flagship of the Washington Capitals radio network beginning in the 2012-13 season. WFED temporarily returned as the Capitals' flagship in the 2016-17 season when the team and WJFK-FM owner CBS Radio could not extend their agreement.[28][29]

In October 2018, WFED rebranded from Federal News Radio to Federal News Network, as part of an effort to rebrand the station as a multi-platform outlet.[30]

From July 2017 to December 2022, WFED was also available on WTOP-FM-HD2 in the Washington, D.C. area and WTLP-HD2 in Braddock Heights, Maryland.[31]

Cully Stimson controversy Edit

On January 11, 2007, while being interviewed on WFED's morning program The Federal Drive, then-Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs Charles "Cully" Stimson criticized some major U.S. law firms for representing detainees at Guantanamo Bay pro bono. Stimson further suggested that U.S. corporations who retained these same U.S. law firms should reconsider their associations with those firms. His comments drew immediate criticism from legal scholars, professional legal associations and the ACLU, and even the Pentagon itself sought to distance itself and the Bush administration from Stimson's comments. Although he apologized a few days later, on February 2, 2007 Stimson resigned his position with the Pentagon, saying he believed the flap would prevent him from effectively doing his job. The controversy heightened the profile of the station, however, as the station's morning hosts and reporters were interviewed by news organizations around the world about the controversy.[32][33]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "WFED-AM Radio Station Coverage Map".
  2. ^ "WFED-AM Radio Station Coverage Map".
  3. ^ "SBE Chapter 37 - Prior Meetings Page - AM Revitalization - WFED 1500 AM Transmitter".
  4. ^ "Capitals and Wizards announce radio partnership with WFED 1500". The Washington Post. October 12, 2016. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  5. ^ "Caps Radio 24/7". Washington Capitals. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  6. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, September 30, 1926, page 3.
  7. ^ "WTRC", The Airwaves of New York: Illustrated Histories of 156 AM Stations in the Metropolitan Area, 1921-1996 by Bill Jaker, Frank Sulek and Peter Kanze, 1998, page 180.
  8. ^ "Broadcasting stations, alphabetically by call signals" Radio Service Bulletin, December 31, 1926, page 21.
  9. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, October 31, 1928, page 8.
  10. ^ "Broadcasting Stations, by Wave Lengths, Effective November 11, 1928, Commercial and Government Radio Stations of the United States (edition June 30, 1928), page 176.
  11. ^ WJSV (advertisement), Broadcasting, October 1, 1932, page 4.
  12. ^ "Commission Denies Application of CBS For Washington Booster by 3-to-2 Vote", Broadcasting, December 1, 1931, pages 6, 34.
  13. ^ a b "WJSV, New CBS Outlet, Opens Oct. 20 as WMAL Plans Added Features", Broadcasting, October 15, 1932, page 10.
  14. ^ "Painless Moving", Broadcasting, November 1, 1936, page 32.
  15. ^ WTOP (advertisement), Broadcasting, April 5, 1943, page 5.
  16. ^ "Assignments of United States Standard Broadcast Stations Listed by Frequency", page 1442.
  17. ^ "WJSV Becomes WTOP Beginning Today", Washington, D.C. Evening Star, April 4, 1943, page E-3.
  18. ^ "WTOP-KQW: CBS Sells 55% D. C.; Planning TV" (PDF). Broadcasting. May 24, 1948. pp. 27, 105. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  19. ^ "WINX AM, FM: FCC Asked to Okay Sale to Banks, 'Post'" (PDF). Broadcasting. January 24, 1949. p. 50. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  20. ^ a b Pointer, Jack (April 2019). "'You turn us on and we're there': Looking back at 50 years of news on WTOP". WTOP. p. April 1, 2019. from the original on April 5, 2019. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
  21. ^ NIAC Order No. 1, Dec 1970 July 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved on October 22, 2010.
  22. ^ TopHour. 2014. Archived from the original on March 21, 2015. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
  23. ^ Farhi, Paul (August 28, 2007). "With Low Ratings, Post Radio Venture To End Next Month". The Washington Post.
  24. ^ Federal News Radio Expands to Full Market Signal (3wtradio.com)
  25. ^ . Radio-Info.com. January 19, 2011. Archived from the original on January 22, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
  26. ^ "WTOP news radio to be sold to Minnesota broadcaster". The Washington Post. from the original on March 9, 2021.
  27. ^ . Radio Ink. May 2, 2011. Archived from the original on March 12, 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  28. ^ "Capitals 2012-13 Regular-Season Schedule". NHL.com.
  29. ^ Steinberg, Dan (October 4, 2017). "Capitals radio broadcasts will return to 106.7 The Fan this season". Washington Post.
  30. ^ McLane, Paul (October 9, 2018). "Federal News Radio Loses the "Radio" Tag". Radio World. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  31. ^ "Radio Sputnik Off WTOP - 6/29". www.dcrtv.com. June 29, 2017. Retrieved July 2, 2017.
  32. ^ "Pentagon Official Who Criticized Detainee Lawyers Quits", The Washington Post (February 7, 2007), p. A06.
  33. ^ "'Cully' Stimson Stepping Down", Federal News Radio (February 2, 2007).]

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • WFED in the FCC AM station database
  • WFED on Radio-Locator
  • WFED in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History Cards for WFED (covering 1927-1981 as WTRC / WTFF / WJSV / WTOP)
  • "WJSV History" by James Snyder
  • "The Klan Leaves Its Mark on Washington's Airwaves" by Mark Jones, January 12, 2015.
  • WJSV schedule for September 21, 1939
  • 19 hours of rcordings of the WJSV's September 21, 1939 broadcast day
  • Information on WJSV Broadcast Day recordings

wfed, 1500, watt, class, radio, station, washington, region, station, branded, federal, news, network, broadcasts, news, talk, format, focused, issues, news, pertaining, members, staff, united, states, government, owned, hubbard, broadcasting, current, second,. WFED 1500 AM is a 50 000 watt Class A radio station in the Washington D C region The station branded as Federal News Network broadcasts a news talk format focused on issues and news pertaining to members and staff of the United States government Owned by Hubbard Broadcasting the current WFED is the second in the Washington area to carry the Federal News Network format as WFED as from 2004 until a transfer in 2008 this format and related call letters were used by a Silver Spring Maryland station broadcasting on 1050 kHz WFEDWashington D C Broadcast areaWashington D C Frequency1500 kHzBrandingFederal News NetworkProgrammingFormatNews talkAffiliationsAssociated PressCBS News RadioVoice of AmericaWUSAOwnershipOwnerHubbard Broadcasting Washington DC FCC License Sub LLC Sister stationsWBQH WTOP FM WWWT FMHistoryFirst air date1926 97 years ago 1926 Former call signsWTRC 1926 27 WTFF 1927 29 WJSV 1929 43 WTOP 1943 2006 WTWP 2006 07 WWWT 2007 08 Former frequencies1250 kHz 1927 1470 kHz 1927 1480 kHz 1927 28 1460 kHz 1928 41 Call sign meaning Federal News Radio Technical informationFacility ID74120ClassAPower50 000 wattsTransmitter coordinates39 2 31 N 77 2 47 W 39 04194 N 77 04639 W 39 04194 77 04639 WFED Translator s 104 5 W283DG Sterling Virginia LinksWebcastListen liveWebsitefederalnewsnetwork wbr comWFED s studios are located at Hubbard s broadcast complex in northwest Washington while its transmitter site is located at a three tower array in Wheaton Maryland The station transmits fulltime with a power of 50 000 watts A single transmitter tower with a non directional signal is used during the day providing at least secondary coverage to large portions of Maryland including Baltimore and Virginia 1 At night all three towers are used for a directional pattern that mutually protects KSTP in St Paul Minnesota This results in areas of Northern Virginia getting only marginal coverage at best 2 Even with this restriction WFED s signal can be heard across most of the eastern half of North America with a good radio citation needed WFED became a Primary Entry Point station for the Emergency Alert System in 2014 3 In 2006 the station began broadcasting in digital HD Radio Contents 1 Programming 2 History 2 1 Establishment in Brooklyn New York 2 2 Move south 2 3 1940s 2 4 1960s and 1970s All news 2 5 1990s 2020s 2 6 WTWP Washington Post Radio 2 7 WWWT Talk Radio 3WT 2 8 WFED Federal News Network 3 Cully Stimson controversy 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksProgramming EditWFED s weekday programming consists primarily of original news and talk content for federal government employees the Senior Executive Service and contractors While most of this airs on a daily basis various programming is rotated in the midday hours This programming in the past has included several Voice of America programs including Issues in the News Press Conference USA and Our World Most weekend programming is a mix of brokered programming and replays of weekday programming citation needed WFED is the flagship station for George Washington Colonials basketball It also carries selected Navy Midshipmen football basketball and lacrosse games as an affiliate station WFED is also the flagship station of the Washington Wizards 4 The station is a Capitals network affiliate station 5 which allowed fans up and down the East Coast to hear the Capitals run to the 2018 Stanley Cup Finals History EditEstablishment in Brooklyn New York Edit The station was first licensed on September 25 1926 as WTRC to the Twentieth Assembly District Regular Republican Club Inc 62 Woodbine Street in Brooklyn New York 6 It was established during a chaotic period when most government regulation had been suspended with new stations free to be set up with few restrictions 7 As of the end of 1926 WTRC was reported to be at 1250 kHz with a power of 50 watts 8 In March 1927 government oversight of radio stations was reestablished with the formation of the Federal Radio Commission FRC Move south Edit On August 2 1927 the station s owner was changed to the Independent Publishing Company the call sign was changed to WTFF reflecting its affiliation with The Fellowship Forum newspaper in addition to a relocation to Mount Vernon Hills Virginia a southern suburb of Washington D C In the fall of 1928 the call sign was changed to WJSV 9 the initials of the Fellowship Forum publisher James S Vance who was controversial due to ties he and his newspaper had to the Ku Klux Klan On November 11 1928 under the provisions of a major national reallocation by the FRC s General Order 40 WTFF was assigned to a high powered regional frequency of 1460 kHz with a power of 10 000 watts The only other station assigned to this frequency was KSTP in Saint Paul Minnesota 10 nbsp In 1932 the Columbia Broadcasting System assumed control of WJSV 11 In late 1931 the Columbia Broadcasting System CBS applied to construct a 250 watt booster station in Washington retransmitting the signal of its New York City station however this request was denied by the FRC 12 As an alternative CBS next made arrangements to lease WJSV and took over all of WJSV s programming and engineering costs with an option to renew or purchase the station after five years This resulted in the transfer of the local CBS network affiliation from WMAL to WJSV 13 CBS also moved the transmitter site to Potomac Yards in Alexandria to boost power and improve the coverage pattern In June 1932 CBS exercised its option to purchase WJSV outright and moved its operations to Alexandria Virginia After three months off the air WJSV resumed broadcasting on October 20 1932 13 In 1936 with the elimination of the jurisdictional quotas that had been imposed by the Davis Amendment the station s studios were moved from Alexandria to the Earle Building in Washington 14 On September 21 1939 WJSV recorded its entire broadcast day for posterity The WJSV broadcast day recordings still exist and copies can be found at the Internet Archive and various old time radio websites Arthur Godfrey who later hosted a variety program on CBS Radio and CBS Television hosted a program on WJSV called The Sundial on which he honed a laid back conversational style that was unusual on radio at the time WJSV was also a key training ground for pioneering newsman Bob Trout in the 1930s before he became a network correspondent One of his broadcasting mentors was Wells Ted Church who later became a CBS News executive Longtime Los Angeles area TV newscaster George Putnam worked at WJSV in 1938 and continued to work in radio for seven decades until his death in 2008 Frank Blair who later became an NBC News correspondent and later was a long time news anchor on the Today show during the 1960s and early 1970s worked at WJSV John Daly longtime host of game show What s My Line and 1950 s anchor on ABC TV news also got his start on WJSV 1940s Edit nbsp In 1943 the station s call letters were changed to WTOP 15 In 1940 power was increased to 50 000 watts from a new transmitter site in Wheaton Maryland In March 1941 as part of the implementation of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement the station was assigned to its current clear channel frequency of 1500 kHz with the provision that it and KSTP both Class I B stations had to maintain directional antennas at night in order to mutually protect each other from interference 16 The station s call letters were changed from WJSV to WTOP on April 4 1943 The new call sign was selected to be easier to remember In addition at this time the highest AM band frequency in the U S was 1500 kHz so the new call sign reflected the station s position near the top of the dial on radio receivers 17 CBS sold 55 percent majority control of WTOP to The Washington Post in February 1949 this deal was made so CBS could acquire full control of KQW in San Francisco 18 As part of the transaction The Post divested WINX 1340 AM but retained WINX FM which was renamed WTOP FM through a legal maneuver 19 The Post took over the remainder of WTOP in December 1954 1960s and 1970s All news Edit After its signature personality Arthur Godfrey left WTOP in 1948 to concentrate on his television and midday network radio shows the station gradually faded in popularity as it faced competition from the Washington Star s WMAL with the morning team of Harden and Weaver and NBC owned WRC which featured future Today Show personality Willard Scott In the 1960s after a series of failed music formats WTOP phased out its music programming for a combination of newscasts and phone in talk shows A switch to all news at first only during the week came in March 1969 20 Among those working for WTOP during this time were Sam Donaldson later on ABC TV Jim Bohannon who took Larry King s place on his all night radio network talk show after King went to CNN and including Ralph Begleiter and Jamie MacIntyre both of whom went to CNN WTOP studios were apparently a critical link in Emergency Broadcast System activation scenarios during the Cold War era 21 In 1971 the Post donated the original WTOP FM at 96 3 MHz to Howard University in order to stimulate the intellectual and cultural life of the whole community and to train more people for the communications industry On December 6 1971 this station changed its call letters to WHUR FM The Post sold WTOP to The Outlet Company in June 1978 in reaction to the FCC s concerns that common ownership of newspapers and broadcasting outlets in the same city was an unhealthy consolidation of local media One month later WTOP TV was swapped with the Detroit News s WWJ TV and became WDVM TV The station is today WUSA TV owned by Tegna 1990s 2020s Edit Outlet re organized and sold WTOP to Chase Broadcasting in 1989 who in turn sold it to Evergreen Media which eventually became Chancellor Broadcasting in November 1992 In April 1997 Evergreen s newly acquired 94 3 MHz facility in Warrenton Virginia began simulcasting the WTOP signal for better coverage in the sprawling Northern Virginia suburbs Shortly afterward on October 10 1997 Bonneville International Corporation purchased WTOP On April 1 1998 94 3 was swapped for a stronger signal at 107 7 also licensed to Warrenton The 94 3 facility is now K Love station WLZV Then in December 2000 WTOP gained another simulcast in Frederick Maryland with WXTR at 820 kHz establishing the WTOP Radio Network a name it used until 2006 22 Over its first three decades WTOP commonly broke the all news format for sports including at various times the Washington Capitals Washington Bullets Wizards and Baltimore Orioles and in its early years overnight and weekend talk shows As listeners increasingly indicated a desire for uninterrupted news this programming dwindled over the years WTOP completed the transition to 24 7 news when it dropped the Orioles in 1999 20 In 2005 the station began providing podcasts of selected broadcast programs and in 2006 WTOP began broadcasting in digital HD Radio utilizing iBiquity Digital Corp s IBOC in band on channel technology When AP All News Radio was terminated the station began an affiliation with CNN Headline News which itself was phased out in 2007 by provider Westwood One On January 4 2006 Bonneville International announced that WTOP would move to a new primary frequency of 103 5 FM then held by classical station WGMS which would move to 103 9 and 104 1 FM WTOP s longtime facility at 1500 AM as well as both FM translators 107 7 in Warrenton and low powered 104 3 in Leesburg would be reassigned to the new Washington Post Radio for a March 30 2006 launch date This new partnership meant the Post s was reacquiring the station it had previously operated as WTOP The station has been dominant in the 25 54 demographics since moving to FM The stations respective call signs were changed as of January 11 2006 the former WTOP pair became WTWP The Washington Post and WTOP s new primary stations assumed the WTOP calls WTWP Washington Post Radio Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The current WFED along with WWFD WWWT FM and W282BA were former frequencies and simulcasts of WTOP On March 30 2006 WTOP transitioned entirely to FM with 1500 AM previously the main frequency and 107 7 becoming Washington Post Radio under the calls WTWP and WTWP FM respectively The historic WTOP call sign was transferred for a year to a station on 820 AM in Frederick Maryland which switched to a Washington Post Radio simulcast on June 28 2007 WWWT FM had operated as a simulcast of WTOP since 1998 WWFD had simulcast WTOP since 2000 and carried the WTOP calls on the AM band following the sign on of WTWP before switching to a simulcast of WTWP as WTWT on June 28 2007 As WTWP these stations provided news and commentary during the weekday hours in a long form style similar to that of National Public Radio but on a commercial station staffed and programmed jointly by the Washington Post and WTOP From 8 PM to 5 AM ET the station was programmed as a general interest talk radio station featuring hosts such as Clark Howard Larry King and Jim Bohannon On weekends WTWP rebroadcast programs produced by Radio Netherlands and George Washington University WWWT Talk Radio 3WT Edit For the radio station in Johnson City New York that formerly uses the callsign and slogan see WLTB The Washington Post reported that they would discontinue the Washington Post Radio service after Bonneville decided to pull the plug citing financial losses and low ratings 23 Bonneville International officially launched personality driven talk format Talk Radio 3WT with the WWWT call letters on September 20 2007 with 820 using the call letters WWWB The call letters stood for Whatever We Want talk radio from the station s imaging The morning show with David Burd and Jessica Doyle was retained along with all live sporting events The Tony Kornheiser Show and automotive commentator Pat Goss Syndicated talkers Neal Boortz Bill O Reilly Randi Rhodes and Phil Hendrie were initially added to the lineup as was a simulcast of sister station KSL s Nightside with Michael Castner overnight program Stephanie Miller was added in November after the Washington Nationals season ended and Glenn Beck was added replacing Randi Rhodes on the 1500 and 107 7 frequencies in January 2008 1 verification needed WWWT was one of the few talk stations in America at least in major markets in which the lineup was nearly equally divided among liberal and conservative hosts Like WTWP WWWT remained a member of the CBS Radio Network and retransmitted the audio portion of the CBS television shows Face the Nation and 60 Minutes Also surviving the change in format were Larry King and Jim Bohannon who were carried in the late night time slots although King s show was phased out as part of a nationwide phaseout of all CNN television simulcasts by Westwood One in 2008 WFED Federal News Network Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Federal News Network format was launched by Bonneville International as FederalNewsRadio com the first Internet only all news station and the first Internet station to make the jump to terrestrial radio on February 22 2000 In 2004 the network began being carried on a radio station initially on a Silver Spring Maryland station broadcasting on 1050 kHz which was assigned the call letters WFED In November 2007 this original WFED increased its daytime power from 1 kW to 3 5 kW in order to better reach the government office workers in Washington D C comprising its core audience However its nighttime coverage was severely limited as it had to reduce power to an all but unlistenable 44 watts at sunset nbsp Federal News Radio logo from 2011 through 2018On August 11 2008 Bonneville announced the discontinuation of 3WT and the transfer of the Federal News Radio programming and WFED call letters to AM 1500 This move to the capital s most powerful AM facility resulted in significantly improved daytime and especially nighttme coverage WWWT FM began simulcasting WTOP FM which kept its two other frequencies while WFED took over WWWT and WWWB s signals August 11 was the last day for the morning show The Inner Loop with David Burd and his team For some time before then WTOP had significant listenership among federal employees and many of them had emailed the station asking for more coverage tailored to federal employees The programming concept has changed little to this day except that the Associated Press All News Radio service originally filled in during the overnight hours as a complement to WTOP Sports that had been broadcast on 3WT continued on 1500 kHz and 820 kHz The stations remained the flagships of Washington Nationals baseball until 2011 when the team changed its primary station to WJFK FM 24 Bonneville announced the sale of WFED and WWFD as well as 15 other stations to Hubbard Broadcasting on January 19 2011 this put WFED under common ownership with KSTP Hubbard s St Paul Minnesota station which was the other clear channel station on 1500 kHz 25 26 The sale was completed on April 29 2011 27 WFED was dropped as the flagship of the Washington Nationals Radio Network in favor of WJFK FM in 2011 but remained as an affiliate station through the 2020 season allowing the Nationals run to the 2019 World Series to be heard along most of the East Coast at night WJFK FM also replaced WFED as the flagship of the Washington Capitals radio network beginning in the 2012 13 season WFED temporarily returned as the Capitals flagship in the 2016 17 season when the team and WJFK FM owner CBS Radio could not extend their agreement 28 29 In October 2018 WFED rebranded from Federal News Radio to Federal News Network as part of an effort to rebrand the station as a multi platform outlet 30 From July 2017 to December 2022 WFED was also available on WTOP FM HD2 in the Washington D C area and WTLP HD2 in Braddock Heights Maryland 31 Cully Stimson controversy EditOn January 11 2007 while being interviewed on WFED s morning program The Federal Drive then Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs Charles Cully Stimson criticized some major U S law firms for representing detainees at Guantanamo Bay pro bono Stimson further suggested that U S corporations who retained these same U S law firms should reconsider their associations with those firms His comments drew immediate criticism from legal scholars professional legal associations and the ACLU and even the Pentagon itself sought to distance itself and the Bush administration from Stimson s comments Although he apologized a few days later on February 2 2007 Stimson resigned his position with the Pentagon saying he believed the flap would prevent him from effectively doing his job The controversy heightened the profile of the station however as the station s morning hosts and reporters were interviewed by news organizations around the world about the controversy 32 33 See also Edit1926 in radioReferences Edit WFED AM Radio Station Coverage Map WFED AM Radio Station Coverage Map SBE Chapter 37 Prior Meetings Page AM Revitalization WFED 1500 AM Transmitter Capitals and Wizards announce radio partnership with WFED 1500 The Washington Post October 12 2016 Retrieved June 11 2022 Caps Radio 24 7 Washington Capitals Retrieved September 27 2021 New Stations Radio Service Bulletin September 30 1926 page 3 WTRC The Airwaves of New York Illustrated Histories of 156 AM Stations in the Metropolitan Area 1921 1996 by Bill Jaker Frank Sulek and Peter Kanze 1998 page 180 Broadcasting stations alphabetically by call signals Radio Service Bulletin December 31 1926 page 21 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin October 31 1928 page 8 Broadcasting Stations by Wave Lengths Effective November 11 1928 Commercial and Government Radio Stations of the United States edition June 30 1928 page 176 WJSV advertisement Broadcasting October 1 1932 page 4 Commission Denies Application of CBS For Washington Booster by 3 to 2 Vote Broadcasting December 1 1931 pages 6 34 a b WJSV New CBS Outlet Opens Oct 20 as WMAL Plans Added Features Broadcasting October 15 1932 page 10 Painless Moving Broadcasting November 1 1936 page 32 WTOP advertisement Broadcasting April 5 1943 page 5 Assignments of United States Standard Broadcast Stations Listed by Frequency page 1442 WJSV Becomes WTOP Beginning Today Washington D C Evening Star April 4 1943 page E 3 WTOP KQW CBS Sells 55 D C Planning TV PDF Broadcasting May 24 1948 pp 27 105 Retrieved December 5 2019 WINX AM FM FCC Asked to Okay Sale to Banks Post PDF Broadcasting January 24 1949 p 50 Retrieved December 5 2019 a b Pointer Jack April 2019 You turn us on and we re there Looking back at 50 years of news on WTOP WTOP p April 1 2019 Archived from the original on April 5 2019 Retrieved April 29 2019 NIAC Order No 1 Dec 1970 Archived July 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on October 22 2010 Washington D C TopHour 2014 Archived from the original on March 21 2015 Retrieved March 21 2015 Farhi Paul August 28 2007 With Low Ratings Post Radio Venture To End Next Month The Washington Post Federal News Radio Expands to Full Market Signal 3wtradio com 505M sale Bonneville sells Chicago D C St Louis and Cincinnati to Hubbard Radio Info com January 19 2011 Archived from the original on January 22 2011 Retrieved January 19 2011 WTOP news radio to be sold to Minnesota broadcaster The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 9 2021 Hubbard deal to purchase Bonneville stations closes Radio Ink May 2 2011 Archived from the original on March 12 2012 Retrieved May 2 2011 Capitals 2012 13 Regular Season Schedule NHL com Steinberg Dan October 4 2017 Capitals radio broadcasts will return to 106 7 The Fan this season Washington Post McLane Paul October 9 2018 Federal News Radio Loses the Radio Tag Radio World Retrieved October 9 2018 Radio Sputnik Off WTOP 6 29 www dcrtv com June 29 2017 Retrieved July 2 2017 Pentagon Official Who Criticized Detainee Lawyers Quits The Washington Post February 7 2007 p A06 Cully Stimson Stepping Down Federal News Radio February 2 2007 External links EditOfficial website WFED in the FCC AM station database WFED on Radio Locator WFED in Nielsen Audio s AM station database FCC History Cards for WFED covering 1927 1981 as WTRC WTFF WJSV WTOP WJSV History by James Snyder The Klan Leaves Its Mark on Washington s Airwaves by Mark Jones January 12 2015 WJSV schedule for September 21 1939 19 hours of rcordings of the WJSV s September 21 1939 broadcast day Information on WJSV Broadcast Day recordings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WFED amp oldid 1168497047, 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