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Wikipedia

WLS (AM)

WLS (890 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Chicago, Illinois. Owned by Cumulus Media, through licensee Radio License Holdings LLC, the station airs a talk radio format. WLS has its radio studios in the NBC Tower on North Columbus Drive in the city's Streeterville neighborhood. Its non-directional broadcast tower is located on the southwestern edge of Tinley Park, Illinois in Will County.[3][6]

WLS
Broadcast areaChicago metropolitan area
Frequency890 kHz
Branding89 WLS
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatTalk radio
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
April 11, 1924; 100 years ago (1924-04-11)
Former call signs
Former frequencies
Call sign meaning
Founded by Sears, the "World's Largest Store"
Technical information[5]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID73227
ClassA
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
41°33′21.1″N 87°50′54.20″W / 41.555861°N 87.8483889°W / 41.555861; -87.8483889
Repeater(s)94.7 WLS-FM HD2 (Chicago)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen live
Listen live (via iHeartRadio)
Websitewww.wlsam.com

WLS is a Class A station broadcasting on the clear-channel frequency of 890 kHz with 50,000 watts using a Nautel NX-50 transmitter. A Harris DX-50 serves as a backup transmitter. Both transmitters run in MDCL (Modulation Dependent Carrier Level) mode to improve efficiency. The station's daytime groundwave service contour covers portions of five states.[7] At night, its signal routinely reaches 38 states via skywave.[8] WLS participates in the Emergency Alert System's primary entry point network, serving that function for northern Illinois and western Indiana. The station's programming is also available to listeners in the Chicago metropolitan area with an HD Radio receiver via a simulcast on the HD2 digital subchannel of sister station WLS-FM.

History edit

Founded in 1924 by Sears, Roebuck and Company—with the call sign an abbreviation for Sears' "World's Largest Store" slogan—WLS spent its early years as the radio outlet of the Prairie Farmer magazine. From 1928 until 1954, WLS shared their assigned frequency and overall broadcast operations with Blue Network-owned WENR until the Blue Network's successor, the American Broadcasting Company, merged WENR into WLS and eventually purchased it outright. The station's contemporary hit radio era from 1960 until 1989 saw WLS at a creative and ratings pinnacle headlined by personalities Dick Biondi, Larry Lujack, John Records Landecker and Bob Sirott. Since 1989, WLS has been a full-time talk radio outlet.

Sears ownership edit

In the 1920s, Sears, Roebuck and Company was a major retail and mail order company. To get farmers and people in rural communities to buy radio sets from its catalogs, Sears bought time on radio stations, and then decided to form its own station.[1] Just before the permanent station was ready, Sears began broadcasts on March 21, 1924, as WBBX with noon programs using the WMAQ studios.[1] WLS was one of the original 50,000-watt Class I-A clear-channel stations which did not share its original frequency of 870 kHz with any other station during nighttime hours, when AM radio signals can travel long distances via skywave.

Sears broadcast test transmissions from its own studios on April 9, 10 and 11, 1924, using the call sign WES (for "World's Economy Store").[1] Sears originally operated its station at the company's corporate headquarters on Chicago's West Side, which is also where the company's mail order business was located.[1] On April 12, 1924, the station commenced officially, using the call letters WLS (for "World's Largest Store"), and broadcasting from its new studios in the Sherman House Hotel in downtown Chicago.[1][9] The station's transmitter was originally located outside Crete, Illinois.[1][4] On April 19, the station aired its first National Barn Dance.[1] Harriet Lee was a WLS staff singer as part of the Harmony Team in the late 1920s.[10] The popular contralto singer also played "Aunt May" on the Children's Hour show. The station shared time on the frequency with WCBD until November 11, 1928, at which point it began sharing time with WENR.[11]

Prairie Farmer ownership edit

 
The Prairie Farmer Building, home to WLS's studios from 1930 to 1960.

Sears opened the station in 1924 as a service to farmers and subsequently sold it to the Prairie Farmer magazine in 1928.[12][4] The station moved to the Prairie Farmer Building on West Washington in Chicago, where it remained for 32 years.[13] For a few months after ABC's 1960 purchase of it and the format change, the "bright new sound" that began in May 1960 was broadcast from the Prairie Farmer Building. WLS didn't make the move to downtown Michigan Avenue's Stone Container Building, located at 360 North Michigan Avenue, until October of that year.[14] Thirty years later, it would move once more, to 190 North State in downtown Chicago.[15][16] It was the scene of the National Barn Dance, which featured Gene Autry, Pat Buttram, and George Gobel, and which was second only to the Grand Ole Opry (itself a local National Barn Dance spinoff) in presenting country music and humor.[17][18]

The station also experimented successfully in many forms of news broadcasting, including weather and crop reports. Its most famous news broadcast was the eyewitness report of the Hindenburg disaster by Herbert Morrison.[19] Morrison and engineer Charles Nehlsen had been sent to New Jersey by WLS to cover the arrival of the Hindenburg for delayed broadcast. Their recordings aired the next day on May 7, 1937,[20] the first time that recordings of a news event were ever broadcast.

In the fall of 1937, the station was one of several Chicago radio stations to donate airtime to Chicago Public Schools for a pioneering program in which the school district provided elementary school students with distance education amid a polio outbreak-related school closure.[21]

Blue Network edit

 
WLS's transmitter building in Tinley Park

Starting in the 1930s, WLS was an affiliate of the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC),[22] and as such aired the popular Fibber McGee and Molly and Lum and Abner comedy programs (both produced at the studios of Chicago's NBC-owned stations, WENR and WMAQ) during their early years. When the Federal Communications Commission forced NBC to sell the Blue Network, WLS maintained its affiliation with the network under its new identity, the American Broadcasting Company (ABC).[23] Under this affiliation, some programs from the network that were not commercially sponsored or which were scheduled to cross the time that WLS and WENR shifted its use of the same frequency (such as baseball or football games) were transferred to air on a third Blue Network/ABC affiliate in Chicago, WCFL. Blue/ABC network broadcasts of addresses by labor leaders were also shifted away from WLS and WENR to WCFL, which was owned at the time by the Chicago Federation of Labor.

In 1931, the station's power was increased from 5,000 watts to 50,000 watts, and the station began sharing the transmitter of WENR near Downers Grove, Illinois.[4][24] In 1938, the station's transmitter was moved to Tinley Park, Illinois.[4]

WENR edit

 
On March 29, 1941, WLS and WENR moved from 870 to 890 kHz, as part of the regional NARBA reassignments[25]

WENR has its origins in a 10-watt station started in late 1924 by E. N. Rauland, whose company manufactured the All-American brand of radios.[26] On March 19, 1925, he received his license for WENR broadcasting 100 watts at 1130 kHz.[27][28][26] By fall 1925, WENR was using a 1,000-watt transmitter designed by Rauland himself.[26][29] The station shared time on the frequency with WBCN, owned at that time by the Southtown Economist newspaper.[29] By 1927, the two stations had changed frequencies to 1040 kHz.[30]

By 1927, Chicago investor Samuel Insull had purchased both stations, through his company Great Lakes Broadcasting.[31] On September 1, 1928, broadcasts as WBCN were discontinued, and the station, now licensed as WENR-WBCN, began full-time operations on the frequency.[11] In November 1928, the station once more changed frequencies, this time to 870 kHz, sharing time with WLS, and it became the first Chicago radio station operating 50,000 watts of power from a new transmitter in Downers Grove, Illinois.[11] Insull moved his stations first into Chicago's Strauss Building,[32] and then to his own Civic Opera Building.[33]

In 1931, WENR was sold to the National Broadcasting Company for approximately $1 million.[34] The station became part of NBC's Blue Network.[22][35] NBC moved WENR's studios to the Merchandise Mart, its Chicago headquarters.[22][35] On May 15, 1933, after the Federal Radio Commission (FRC) requested that stations using only one of their assigned call letters drop those that were no longer in regular use, the WBCN call sign was eliminated, and the station reverted to just WENR.[36]

In the fall of 1937, the station was one of several Chicago radio stations to donate airtime to Chicago Public Schools for a pioneering program in which the school district provided elementary school students with distance education amid a polio outbreak-related school closure.[21]

 
1954 station logo

Changes were made regarding AM frequencies in 1941 as a result of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA); this moved WENR and WLS from 870 to 890 kHz.[37] In August 1943, NBC was ordered to divest itself of the Blue Network and its stations; WENR and Blue were sold to Edward J. Noble. In 1945 the Blue Network would be renamed as the American Broadcasting Company.[38] The station continued on at the Mart, as NBC's tenant, until 1952 when it moved back to the Civic Opera House.[35] Paul Harvey worked as an evening newscaster on WENR from 1944 to 1951.[39][40] WENR was deleted in 1954.

ABC ownership edit

WENR and WLS used the same frequencies in a time-sharing arrangement until 1954, when ABC (then known as American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres) bought a 50 percent interest in WLS and combined the stations.[1][41]

In November 1959, ABC announced its purchase of Prairie Farmer and its half of WLS, giving ABC full ownership of the station.[42]

The WLS Musicradio era edit

 
WLS weekly Silver Dollar Survey, distributed free via record stores, was retitled Silver Beatle Survey during the height of Beatlemania

On May 2, 1960, at 6 am, WLS went with a full-time Top 40 format.[43][44] Mort Crowley was the first disc jockey under the new format, and the first song played was "Alley-Oop" by The Hollywood Argyles, four weeks before it debuted on the Hot 100.[44][45] The station's jingles were sung by the Anita Kerr Singers.[46][14]

Ralph Beaudin was the station's president and general manager, and oversaw the station's transformation into a Top 40 station.[14][46][47] Sam Holman was the station's program director and an afternoon DJ.[14][47] Beaudin and Holman were both brought in from KQV in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[46][47] Ed Grennan, an announcer on the station since 1959, was retained as a DJ under the new format.[14][48][46][49] Star disc jockey Dick Biondi, a 1998 inductee into the National Radio Hall of Fame, was brought in from WEBR in Buffalo, New York.[50][51][46] Biondi remained on the station until 1963.[52] Other DJs who were brought in for the station's new format included Bob Hale from WIRL in Peoria, Illinois, Gene Taylor from WOKY in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Mort Crowley from WADO in New York City, and Jim Dunbar from WDSU in New Orleans, Louisiana.[46][51]

In October 1960, Art Roberts joined the station as a DJ, having previously worked at WKBW in Buffalo, New York.[53][54] Clark Weber joined the station as a DJ, remaining with the station until 1969.[55] In 1963, Ron "Ringo" Riley joined the station as a DJ, having previously worked at WHK in Cleveland, Ohio.[14][52][56] Dex Card joined the station in 1964, and hosted the Silver Dollar Survey countdown until 1967, the longest of the show's hosts.[57] In 1967, Larry Lujack joined WLS as a DJ, four months after he had started at the station's top competitor WCFL.[14][58] Lujack returned to WCFL in 1972, but rejoined WLS in 1976, remaining with the station until 1987.[59][58] In 1968, a mid-twenty-something Chuck Buell was recruited as the youngest on-air radio personality for a major market contemporary hit music station to date to host the early evening 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. show. An equally young Kris Eric Stevens soon followed a few months later to follow for the 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. show. In 1972, John Records Landecker joined WLS, remaining with the station until 1981.[60][61] Landecker returned to WLS in 1986, and remained with the station until its format was changed in 1989.[62][59][56][63] Tommy Edwards joined the station as production director in 1972, becoming program director one year later, and later becoming a mid-day DJ.[64][65][56][66] Bob Sirott joined WLS in June 1973, remaining with the station until December 1979.[67][68]

Other DJs on WLS during its top 40 era included Joel Sebastian, Gary Gears, J. J. Jefferies, Jerry Kay, Yvonne Daniels,[69] Brant Miller, Tom Kent,[59] Steve King, Jeff Davis, and Fred Winston.[14][56] Some of the production directors responsible for the sound of WLS were Ray Van Steen, Hal Widsten, Jim Hampton, Bill Price and Tommy Edwards.

In the 1960s, WLS was a major force in introducing new music and recording artists. The first US airplay of a record by The Beatles ("Please Please Me") was on Dick Biondi's show on February 8, 1963.[70][71][72]

WLS was voted by broadcasters nationally as "Radio Station of the Year" in 1967, 1968 and 1969. John Rook was named "Program Director of the Year" in 1968 and 1969 as WLS was estimated attracting 4.2 million listeners weekly by Pulse research.[73]

 
WLS disk jockeys at a Frisbee promotion, 1972. From left: Bill Bailey, Chuck Knapp, Charlie Van Dyke, Fred Winston and John Records Landecker.

WLS also produced the weekly Silver Dollar Survey[74][75] from October 14, 1960, to December 22, 1967, broken by the Silver Beatle Survey on February 21, 1964, and the Super Summer Survey from May 5, 1967, to August 25, 1967. The survey nominally contained 40 current song listings, except for occasional weeks when it contained fewer current listings, usually 20, plus a special listing of some of the greatest oldies. From September 18, 1964, through December 25, 1964, the survey consisted of the top 30 pop hits, followed by the top 10 R&B hits. Thereafter, the survey changed its name numerous times (89 WLS Hit Parade, 89 WLS Chicagoland Hit Parade, WLS Musicradio 89, etc.).[76] Starting with the July 20, 1970, survey, the number of listings dropped from 40 to 30, then varying from 25 to 40 starting June 26, 1972, then dropping to 15 by March 9, 1974, then increasing to a high of 45 by the end of 1975. No "take home" surveys were printed from March 13, 1972, through July 16, 1973 (these were limited to one poster-size weekly survey displayed at record shops).[77] The year-end listing was the 20 greatest hits of the year for each year from 1963 through 1966, increased to 89 from 1967 onward.[78]

 
WLS 1975 logo

Like many AM radio stations of the seventies, WLS edited many of the songs they played into a more "radio-friendly" or "radio edit" (a term still used today) format, usually 3–4 minutes in length. Other special editions of some Top 40 songs exclusively made for their broadcasting were done by the musicians themselves or sometimes by the WLS audio engineers. An example of these included Reunion's 1974 song "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)". Reunion changed the song's lyrics from "Life is a rock but the radio rolled me" to "Life is a rock/WLS rolled me".[79] A similar version was made for competitor WCFL.[79] Another "WLS-only" version was a combination of Captain and Tennille's "Love Will Keep Us Together" and "Por Amor Viviremos", which featured alternating English and Spanish vocals.[80]

By the mid-1970s, WLS became conservative about introducing new songs, and many record promoters referred to the station as the "World's Last Station" to add new releases for airplay,[81] usually only after the songs had reached the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. However, in 1974, the station started playing the track "Lady" by the Chicago band Styx from an older album of theirs, resulting in other stations around the country adding the song and making the track Styx' first national Top 40 hit.[82]

During the 1970s WLS ran a Sunday night music interview program called "Musicpeople".[83][84]

In 1984, Steve Dahl and Garry Meier's program was moved to WLS from WLS-FM, over the objections of the duo, who attempted to have their contract declared invalid.[85][59] Nevertheless, Dahl and Meier drew higher ratings on WLS than they had on WLS-FM.[86][59] Dahl and Meier left WLS in 1986, returning to WLUP.[87][88]

Well into the 1980s, WLS continued as a mainstream Top 40 formatted station.[89] However, beginning in 1985, the station would begin to undergo major changes. In January 1985, the station began airing Sex Talk on Sunday nights, hosted by Phyllis Levy, a sex therapist.[90] By 1987, WLS was airing adult contemporary music, liberally laced with oldies and standards, with talk programming at night.[59][56][91] During the 1980s, Les Grobstein was hired as the first and only full-time Sports Director of WLS and broke the story of Cubs manager Lee Elia's famous tirade on April 29, 1983, after a loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, which included 54 profanities.

Talkradio era edit

 
WLS logo for its early Talk Radio years.

In June 1989, WLS announced it was going all-talk by the end of the summer.[92] Rumors were that the change was to happen September 1. Air personalities were becoming more talk-intensive anyway and midday talk was added as well. But quietly, with no warning, on August 23, 1989, at 7 pm, WLS stopped playing music altogether.[59][93] Phil Duncan was the last DJ to play music on WLS, and as Duncan finished up his show, a voice in the back of the studio (that of then-WYTZ DJ Steven Craig) was heard saying "Goodnight!" (Craig unknowingly (and unofficially) became the last live voice on Musicradio WLS.) Appropriately, the last song was "Just You 'n' Me" by Chicago.[59][93] WLS then became a talk station, with Sally Jesse Raphael as its first host.[59] In the beginning of the talk format, WLS featured high-rated talk talents from around the country, such as Bob Lassiter from Tampa Bay, Stacy Taylor from San Diego and the station's biggest hit, Rush Limbaugh out of New York.[94] After a few years, however, Lassiter, Taylor and some of their other national hosts were dropped in favor of more local hosts. Jay Marvin also had several stints on WLS, where he was one of the few liberal voices on its political talk shows, which had mostly conservative viewpoints. The station served as the "flagship" broadcast outlet for the Sunday night, national political talk show, Beyond the Beltway with Bruce DuMont.[95]

By 1992, WLS had such low ratings that ABC's national management was planning on flipping the station to a satellite-fed country format (management went so far as to distribute an all-staff memo and hosts being told they were about to be let go). However, in what was described as an "eleventh hour decision", ABC canceled the planned format change due to convincing from local management. Throughout the 1990s, ratings began to grow, with the station occasionally ranked in the Top 10.[96]

On Memorial Day, 2007, WLS took a cue from sister station WABC and ran a special day of musical programming, "The Big 89 Rewind", featuring live visits from Larry Lujack, Tommy Edwards,[97] Fred Winston, Chris Shebel, Jeff Davis, John Records Landecker, Tom Kent, and other DJs, sounders, and airchecks from the Musicradio era.[98] The broadcasts re-aired on Independence Day 2007, and there was a new Rewind in 2008.[99]

Cumulus ownership edit

 
2012 logo

ABC-owned radio stations which were not affiliated with ESPN Radio or Radio Disney, including WLS, were sold to Citadel Broadcasting on June 12, 2007, with Citadel licensing the name ABC Radio for 2 years after the sale.[100][101][102] Citadel was acquired by Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011.[103]

Cumulus Media terminated its affiliation with overnight radio program Coast to Coast AM on many of its stations, including WLS. In the spring of 2012, it began airing its own Red Eye Radio.

Longtime morning show hosts Don and Roma Wade retired in December 2012. They had been off the air since October due to Don Wade's cancer treatments. On September 6, 2013, Don Wade died of a brain tumor.[104]

Cumulus radio stations made a break with ABC at the end of 2014, when they no longer carried ABC News Radio. WLS and most Cumulus news/talk stations began running Westwood One News on January 1, 2015. (Westwood One is a Cumulus subsidiary.) This lasted until August 30, 2020, when Westwood One shuttered its news service, and as of August 31, 2020, the station is once again affiliated with ABC News Radio.

In January 2017, WLS and WLS-FM moved from its 190 N. State Street studios to its new studios in NBC Tower on North Columbus Drive in Streeterville.[105][106] In addition, the station became the new affiliate of NBC News Radio. On January 2, 2017, the station added the on-air team of Bob Sirott and Marianne Murciano from WGN (AM); the former marking his return to WLS for the first time since 1980.[107] However, Sirott and Murciano were cut from the station's lineup, beginning January 1, 2018.[108]

Sports edit

On June 23, 2015, WLS announced that the station had picked up broadcasting rights for Chicago White Sox baseball starting with the 2016 season. In addition, WLS had also picked up broadcasting rights for Chicago Bulls basketball, beginning with the 2016-17 NBA season.[109] Due to Cumulus's January 2018 Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the carriage rights were terminated in the filing. The Bulls moved to WSCR, taking effect immediately at the start of February, while the White Sox shifted to WGN several weeks later.[110]

In the 2015–16 season, WLS carried Notre Dame Fighting Irish college football and basketball games.[111][112] In 2016, Notre Dame moved to AM 1000 WMVP.[111][112]

In 2023, WLS became the home for NASCAR, as the Chicago affiliate station for the Motor Racing Network, airing NASCAR Cup Series races, as well as both of the first NASCAR Chicago Street Races, The Loop 121 Xfinity Race and The Grant Park 220 Cup Race.

In 2023, WLS also became the affiliate station for the Chicago Fire MLS team.[113]

Programming edit

Weekdays on WLS, two local talk show hosts are heard: Steve Cochran is in morning drive time. And Brett Gogoel hosts an hour on the markets and an hour on local news topics in late afternoons.[114] The rest of the weekday schedule is nationally syndicated conservative talk shows from co-owned Westwood One: The Chris Plante Show, The Dan Bongino Show, The Ben Shapiro Show, The Mark Levin Show, The Michael Knowles Show, Red Eye Radio and America in the Morning.

Weekends feature shows on money, health, real estate, technology, travel and cars. Syndicated weekend programs include The Kim Komando Show and The Larry Kudlow Show, as well as repeats of weekday shows. Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming. Most hours on nights and weekends begin with an update from ABC News Radio.

References edit

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External links edit

philippine, radio, station, dwls, commercial, radio, station, chicago, illinois, owned, cumulus, media, through, licensee, radio, license, holdings, station, airs, talk, radio, format, radio, studios, tower, north, columbus, drive, city, streeterville, neighbo. For the Philippine radio station see DWLS WLS 890 kHz is a commercial AM radio station in Chicago Illinois Owned by Cumulus Media through licensee Radio License Holdings LLC the station airs a talk radio format WLS has its radio studios in the NBC Tower on North Columbus Drive in the city s Streeterville neighborhood Its non directional broadcast tower is located on the southwestern edge of Tinley Park Illinois in Will County 3 6 WLSChicago IllinoisBroadcast areaChicago metropolitan areaFrequency890 kHzBranding89 WLSProgrammingLanguage s EnglishFormatTalk radioAffiliationsABC News RadioThe Weather ChannelWestwood OneMotor Racing NetworkWLS TV Chicago news partnership OwnershipOwnerCumulus Media Radio License Holdings LLC Sister stationsWKQXWLS FMHistoryFirst air dateApril 11 1924 100 years ago 1924 04 11 Former call signsWES 1924 1 Former frequencies670 kHz 1924 1 2 3 870 kHz 1 2 1924 1941 4 Call sign meaningFounded by Sears the World s Largest Store Technical information 5 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID73227ClassAPower50 000 wattsTransmitter coordinates41 33 21 1 N 87 50 54 20 W 41 555861 N 87 8483889 W 41 555861 87 8483889Repeater s 94 7 WLS FM HD2 Chicago LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen liveListen live via iHeartRadio Websitewww wbr wlsam wbr com WLS is a Class A station broadcasting on the clear channel frequency of 890 kHz with 50 000 watts using a Nautel NX 50 transmitter A Harris DX 50 serves as a backup transmitter Both transmitters run in MDCL Modulation Dependent Carrier Level mode to improve efficiency The station s daytime groundwave service contour covers portions of five states 7 At night its signal routinely reaches 38 states via skywave 8 WLS participates in the Emergency Alert System s primary entry point network serving that function for northern Illinois and western Indiana The station s programming is also available to listeners in the Chicago metropolitan area with an HD Radio receiver via a simulcast on the HD2 digital subchannel of sister station WLS FM Contents 1 History 1 1 Sears ownership 1 2 Prairie Farmer ownership 1 3 Blue Network 1 4 WENR 1 5 ABC ownership 1 6 The WLS Musicradio era 1 7 Talkradio era 1 8 Cumulus ownership 1 8 1 Sports 2 Programming 3 References 4 External linksHistory editFounded in 1924 by Sears Roebuck and Company with the call sign an abbreviation for Sears World s Largest Store slogan WLS spent its early years as the radio outlet of the Prairie Farmer magazine From 1928 until 1954 WLS shared their assigned frequency and overall broadcast operations with Blue Network owned WENR until the Blue Network s successor the American Broadcasting Company merged WENR into WLS and eventually purchased it outright The station s contemporary hit radio era from 1960 until 1989 saw WLS at a creative and ratings pinnacle headlined by personalities Dick Biondi Larry Lujack John Records Landecker and Bob Sirott Since 1989 WLS has been a full time talk radio outlet Sears ownership edit In the 1920s Sears Roebuck and Company was a major retail and mail order company To get farmers and people in rural communities to buy radio sets from its catalogs Sears bought time on radio stations and then decided to form its own station 1 Just before the permanent station was ready Sears began broadcasts on March 21 1924 as WBBX with noon programs using the WMAQ studios 1 WLS was one of the original 50 000 watt Class I A clear channel stations which did not share its original frequency of 870 kHz with any other station during nighttime hours when AM radio signals can travel long distances via skywave Sears broadcast test transmissions from its own studios on April 9 10 and 11 1924 using the call sign WES for World s Economy Store 1 Sears originally operated its station at the company s corporate headquarters on Chicago s West Side which is also where the company s mail order business was located 1 On April 12 1924 the station commenced officially using the call letters WLS for World s Largest Store and broadcasting from its new studios in the Sherman House Hotel in downtown Chicago 1 9 The station s transmitter was originally located outside Crete Illinois 1 4 On April 19 the station aired its first National Barn Dance 1 Harriet Lee was a WLS staff singer as part of the Harmony Team in the late 1920s 10 The popular contralto singer also played Aunt May on the Children s Hour show The station shared time on the frequency with WCBD until November 11 1928 at which point it began sharing time with WENR 11 Prairie Farmer ownership edit nbsp The Prairie Farmer Building home to WLS s studios from 1930 to 1960 Sears opened the station in 1924 as a service to farmers and subsequently sold it to the Prairie Farmer magazine in 1928 12 4 The station moved to the Prairie Farmer Building on West Washington in Chicago where it remained for 32 years 13 For a few months after ABC s 1960 purchase of it and the format change the bright new sound that began in May 1960 was broadcast from the Prairie Farmer Building WLS didn t make the move to downtown Michigan Avenue s Stone Container Building located at 360 North Michigan Avenue until October of that year 14 Thirty years later it would move once more to 190 North State in downtown Chicago 15 16 It was the scene of the National Barn Dance which featured Gene Autry Pat Buttram and George Gobel and which was second only to the Grand Ole Opry itself a local National Barn Dance spinoff in presenting country music and humor 17 18 The station also experimented successfully in many forms of news broadcasting including weather and crop reports Its most famous news broadcast was the eyewitness report of the Hindenburg disaster by Herbert Morrison 19 Morrison and engineer Charles Nehlsen had been sent to New Jersey by WLS to cover the arrival of the Hindenburg for delayed broadcast Their recordings aired the next day on May 7 1937 20 the first time that recordings of a news event were ever broadcast In the fall of 1937 the station was one of several Chicago radio stations to donate airtime to Chicago Public Schools for a pioneering program in which the school district provided elementary school students with distance education amid a polio outbreak related school closure 21 Blue Network edit nbsp WLS s transmitter building in Tinley Park Starting in the 1930s WLS was an affiliate of the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company NBC 22 and as such aired the popular Fibber McGee and Molly and Lum and Abner comedy programs both produced at the studios of Chicago s NBC owned stations WENR and WMAQ during their early years When the Federal Communications Commission forced NBC to sell the Blue Network WLS maintained its affiliation with the network under its new identity the American Broadcasting Company ABC 23 Under this affiliation some programs from the network that were not commercially sponsored or which were scheduled to cross the time that WLS and WENR shifted its use of the same frequency such as baseball or football games were transferred to air on a third Blue Network ABC affiliate in Chicago WCFL Blue ABC network broadcasts of addresses by labor leaders were also shifted away from WLS and WENR to WCFL which was owned at the time by the Chicago Federation of Labor In 1931 the station s power was increased from 5 000 watts to 50 000 watts and the station began sharing the transmitter of WENR near Downers Grove Illinois 4 24 In 1938 the station s transmitter was moved to Tinley Park Illinois 4 WENR edit nbsp On March 29 1941 WLS and WENR moved from 870 to 890 kHz as part of the regional NARBA reassignments 25 WENR has its origins in a 10 watt station started in late 1924 by E N Rauland whose company manufactured the All American brand of radios 26 On March 19 1925 he received his license for WENR broadcasting 100 watts at 1130 kHz 27 28 26 By fall 1925 WENR was using a 1 000 watt transmitter designed by Rauland himself 26 29 The station shared time on the frequency with WBCN owned at that time by the Southtown Economist newspaper 29 By 1927 the two stations had changed frequencies to 1040 kHz 30 By 1927 Chicago investor Samuel Insull had purchased both stations through his company Great Lakes Broadcasting 31 On September 1 1928 broadcasts as WBCN were discontinued and the station now licensed as WENR WBCN began full time operations on the frequency 11 In November 1928 the station once more changed frequencies this time to 870 kHz sharing time with WLS and it became the first Chicago radio station operating 50 000 watts of power from a new transmitter in Downers Grove Illinois 11 Insull moved his stations first into Chicago s Strauss Building 32 and then to his own Civic Opera Building 33 In 1931 WENR was sold to the National Broadcasting Company for approximately 1 million 34 The station became part of NBC s Blue Network 22 35 NBC moved WENR s studios to the Merchandise Mart its Chicago headquarters 22 35 On May 15 1933 after the Federal Radio Commission FRC requested that stations using only one of their assigned call letters drop those that were no longer in regular use the WBCN call sign was eliminated and the station reverted to just WENR 36 In the fall of 1937 the station was one of several Chicago radio stations to donate airtime to Chicago Public Schools for a pioneering program in which the school district provided elementary school students with distance education amid a polio outbreak related school closure 21 nbsp 1954 station logo Changes were made regarding AM frequencies in 1941 as a result of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement NARBA this moved WENR and WLS from 870 to 890 kHz 37 In August 1943 NBC was ordered to divest itself of the Blue Network and its stations WENR and Blue were sold to Edward J Noble In 1945 the Blue Network would be renamed as the American Broadcasting Company 38 The station continued on at the Mart as NBC s tenant until 1952 when it moved back to the Civic Opera House 35 Paul Harvey worked as an evening newscaster on WENR from 1944 to 1951 39 40 WENR was deleted in 1954 ABC ownership edit WENR and WLS used the same frequencies in a time sharing arrangement until 1954 when ABC then known as American Broadcasting Paramount Theatres bought a 50 percent interest in WLS and combined the stations 1 41 In November 1959 ABC announced its purchase of Prairie Farmer and its half of WLS giving ABC full ownership of the station 42 The WLS Musicradio era edit nbsp WLS weekly Silver Dollar Survey distributed free via record stores was retitled Silver Beatle Survey during the height of Beatlemania On May 2 1960 at 6 am WLS went with a full time Top 40 format 43 44 Mort Crowley was the first disc jockey under the new format and the first song played was Alley Oop by The Hollywood Argyles four weeks before it debuted on the Hot 100 44 45 The station s jingles were sung by the Anita Kerr Singers 46 14 Ralph Beaudin was the station s president and general manager and oversaw the station s transformation into a Top 40 station 14 46 47 Sam Holman was the station s program director and an afternoon DJ 14 47 Beaudin and Holman were both brought in from KQV in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 46 47 Ed Grennan an announcer on the station since 1959 was retained as a DJ under the new format 14 48 46 49 Star disc jockey Dick Biondi a 1998 inductee into the National Radio Hall of Fame was brought in from WEBR in Buffalo New York 50 51 46 Biondi remained on the station until 1963 52 Other DJs who were brought in for the station s new format included Bob Hale from WIRL in Peoria Illinois Gene Taylor from WOKY in Milwaukee Wisconsin Mort Crowley from WADO in New York City and Jim Dunbar from WDSU in New Orleans Louisiana 46 51 In October 1960 Art Roberts joined the station as a DJ having previously worked at WKBW in Buffalo New York 53 54 Clark Weber joined the station as a DJ remaining with the station until 1969 55 In 1963 Ron Ringo Riley joined the station as a DJ having previously worked at WHK in Cleveland Ohio 14 52 56 Dex Card joined the station in 1964 and hosted the Silver Dollar Survey countdown until 1967 the longest of the show s hosts 57 In 1967 Larry Lujack joined WLS as a DJ four months after he had started at the station s top competitor WCFL 14 58 Lujack returned to WCFL in 1972 but rejoined WLS in 1976 remaining with the station until 1987 59 58 In 1968 a mid twenty something Chuck Buell was recruited as the youngest on air radio personality for a major market contemporary hit music station to date to host the early evening 6 p m to 10 p m show An equally young Kris Eric Stevens soon followed a few months later to follow for the 10 p m to 2 a m show In 1972 John Records Landecker joined WLS remaining with the station until 1981 60 61 Landecker returned to WLS in 1986 and remained with the station until its format was changed in 1989 62 59 56 63 Tommy Edwards joined the station as production director in 1972 becoming program director one year later and later becoming a mid day DJ 64 65 56 66 Bob Sirott joined WLS in June 1973 remaining with the station until December 1979 67 68 Other DJs on WLS during its top 40 era included Joel Sebastian Gary Gears J J Jefferies Jerry Kay Yvonne Daniels 69 Brant Miller Tom Kent 59 Steve King Jeff Davis and Fred Winston 14 56 Some of the production directors responsible for the sound of WLS were Ray Van Steen Hal Widsten Jim Hampton Bill Price and Tommy Edwards In the 1960s WLS was a major force in introducing new music and recording artists The first US airplay of a record by The Beatles Please Please Me was on Dick Biondi s show on February 8 1963 70 71 72 WLS was voted by broadcasters nationally as Radio Station of the Year in 1967 1968 and 1969 John Rook was named Program Director of the Year in 1968 and 1969 as WLS was estimated attracting 4 2 million listeners weekly by Pulse research 73 nbsp WLS disk jockeys at a Frisbee promotion 1972 From left Bill Bailey Chuck Knapp Charlie Van Dyke Fred Winston and John Records Landecker WLS also produced the weekly Silver Dollar Survey 74 75 from October 14 1960 to December 22 1967 broken by the Silver Beatle Survey on February 21 1964 and the Super Summer Survey from May 5 1967 to August 25 1967 The survey nominally contained 40 current song listings except for occasional weeks when it contained fewer current listings usually 20 plus a special listing of some of the greatest oldies From September 18 1964 through December 25 1964 the survey consisted of the top 30 pop hits followed by the top 10 R amp B hits Thereafter the survey changed its name numerous times 89 WLS Hit Parade 89 WLS Chicagoland Hit Parade WLS Musicradio 89 etc 76 Starting with the July 20 1970 survey the number of listings dropped from 40 to 30 then varying from 25 to 40 starting June 26 1972 then dropping to 15 by March 9 1974 then increasing to a high of 45 by the end of 1975 No take home surveys were printed from March 13 1972 through July 16 1973 these were limited to one poster size weekly survey displayed at record shops 77 The year end listing was the 20 greatest hits of the year for each year from 1963 through 1966 increased to 89 from 1967 onward 78 nbsp WLS 1975 logo Like many AM radio stations of the seventies WLS edited many of the songs they played into a more radio friendly or radio edit a term still used today format usually 3 4 minutes in length Other special editions of some Top 40 songs exclusively made for their broadcasting were done by the musicians themselves or sometimes by the WLS audio engineers An example of these included Reunion s 1974 song Life Is a Rock But the Radio Rolled Me Reunion changed the song s lyrics from Life is a rock but the radio rolled me to Life is a rock WLS rolled me 79 A similar version was made for competitor WCFL 79 Another WLS only version was a combination of Captain and Tennille s Love Will Keep Us Together and Por Amor Viviremos which featured alternating English and Spanish vocals 80 By the mid 1970s WLS became conservative about introducing new songs and many record promoters referred to the station as the World s Last Station to add new releases for airplay 81 usually only after the songs had reached the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 However in 1974 the station started playing the track Lady by the Chicago band Styx from an older album of theirs resulting in other stations around the country adding the song and making the track Styx first national Top 40 hit 82 During the 1970s WLS ran a Sunday night music interview program called Musicpeople 83 84 In 1984 Steve Dahl and Garry Meier s program was moved to WLS from WLS FM over the objections of the duo who attempted to have their contract declared invalid 85 59 Nevertheless Dahl and Meier drew higher ratings on WLS than they had on WLS FM 86 59 Dahl and Meier left WLS in 1986 returning to WLUP 87 88 Well into the 1980s WLS continued as a mainstream Top 40 formatted station 89 However beginning in 1985 the station would begin to undergo major changes In January 1985 the station began airing Sex Talk on Sunday nights hosted by Phyllis Levy a sex therapist 90 By 1987 WLS was airing adult contemporary music liberally laced with oldies and standards with talk programming at night 59 56 91 During the 1980s Les Grobstein was hired as the first and only full time Sports Director of WLS and broke the story of Cubs manager Lee Elia s famous tirade on April 29 1983 after a loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers which included 54 profanities Talkradio era edit nbsp WLS logo for its early Talk Radio years In June 1989 WLS announced it was going all talk by the end of the summer 92 Rumors were that the change was to happen September 1 Air personalities were becoming more talk intensive anyway and midday talk was added as well But quietly with no warning on August 23 1989 at 7 pm WLS stopped playing music altogether 59 93 Phil Duncan was the last DJ to play music on WLS and as Duncan finished up his show a voice in the back of the studio that of then WYTZ DJ Steven Craig was heard saying Goodnight Craig unknowingly and unofficially became the last live voice on Musicradio WLS Appropriately the last song was Just You n Me by Chicago 59 93 WLS then became a talk station with Sally Jesse Raphael as its first host 59 In the beginning of the talk format WLS featured high rated talk talents from around the country such as Bob Lassiter from Tampa Bay Stacy Taylor from San Diego and the station s biggest hit Rush Limbaugh out of New York 94 After a few years however Lassiter Taylor and some of their other national hosts were dropped in favor of more local hosts Jay Marvin also had several stints on WLS where he was one of the few liberal voices on its political talk shows which had mostly conservative viewpoints The station served as the flagship broadcast outlet for the Sunday night national political talk show Beyond the Beltway with Bruce DuMont 95 By 1992 WLS had such low ratings that ABC s national management was planning on flipping the station to a satellite fed country format management went so far as to distribute an all staff memo and hosts being told they were about to be let go However in what was described as an eleventh hour decision ABC canceled the planned format change due to convincing from local management Throughout the 1990s ratings began to grow with the station occasionally ranked in the Top 10 96 On Memorial Day 2007 WLS took a cue from sister station WABC and ran a special day of musical programming The Big 89 Rewind featuring live visits from Larry Lujack Tommy Edwards 97 Fred Winston Chris Shebel Jeff Davis John Records Landecker Tom Kent and other DJs sounders and airchecks from the Musicradio era 98 The broadcasts re aired on Independence Day 2007 and there was a new Rewind in 2008 99 Cumulus ownership edit nbsp 2012 logo ABC owned radio stations which were not affiliated with ESPN Radio or Radio Disney including WLS were sold to Citadel Broadcasting on June 12 2007 with Citadel licensing the name ABC Radio for 2 years after the sale 100 101 102 Citadel was acquired by Cumulus Media on September 16 2011 103 Cumulus Media terminated its affiliation with overnight radio program Coast to Coast AM on many of its stations including WLS In the spring of 2012 it began airing its own Red Eye Radio Longtime morning show hosts Don and Roma Wade retired in December 2012 They had been off the air since October due to Don Wade s cancer treatments On September 6 2013 Don Wade died of a brain tumor 104 Cumulus radio stations made a break with ABC at the end of 2014 when they no longer carried ABC News Radio WLS and most Cumulus news talk stations began running Westwood One News on January 1 2015 Westwood One is a Cumulus subsidiary This lasted until August 30 2020 when Westwood One shuttered its news service and as of August 31 2020 the station is once again affiliated with ABC News Radio In January 2017 WLS and WLS FM moved from its 190 N State Street studios to its new studios in NBC Tower on North Columbus Drive in Streeterville 105 106 In addition the station became the new affiliate of NBC News Radio On January 2 2017 the station added the on air team of Bob Sirott and Marianne Murciano from WGN AM the former marking his return to WLS for the first time since 1980 107 However Sirott and Murciano were cut from the station s lineup beginning January 1 2018 108 Sports edit On June 23 2015 WLS announced that the station had picked up broadcasting rights for Chicago White Sox baseball starting with the 2016 season In addition WLS had also picked up broadcasting rights for Chicago Bulls basketball beginning with the 2016 17 NBA season 109 Due to Cumulus s January 2018 Chapter 11 bankruptcy the carriage rights were terminated in the filing The Bulls moved to WSCR taking effect immediately at the start of February while the White Sox shifted to WGN several weeks later 110 In the 2015 16 season WLS carried Notre Dame Fighting Irish college football and basketball games 111 112 In 2016 Notre Dame moved to AM 1000 WMVP 111 112 In 2023 WLS became the home for NASCAR as the Chicago affiliate station for the Motor Racing Network airing NASCAR Cup Series races as well as both of the first NASCAR Chicago Street Races The Loop 121 Xfinity Race and The Grant Park 220 Cup Race In 2023 WLS also became the affiliate station for the Chicago Fire MLS team 113 Programming editWeekdays on WLS two local talk show hosts are heard Steve Cochran is in morning drive time And Brett Gogoel hosts an hour on the markets and an hour on local news topics in late afternoons 114 The rest of the weekday schedule is nationally syndicated conservative talk shows from co owned Westwood One The Chris Plante Show The Dan Bongino Show The Ben Shapiro Show The Mark Levin Show The Michael Knowles Show Red Eye Radio and America in the Morning Weekends feature shows on money health real estate technology travel and cars Syndicated weekend programs include The Kim Komando Show and The Larry Kudlow Show as well as repeats of weekday shows Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming Most hours on nights and weekends begin with an update from ABC News Radio References edit a b c d e f g h i j k The Beginning The History of WLS Radio Scott Childers March 2 2010 Archived from the original on January 19 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 a b New Radiotelephone Stations Operating in Chicago The New York Times June 1 1924 Archived from the original on January 19 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 a b pmg NzeroNNK November 24 2004 WLS 890 and Larry Lujack Archived from the original on July 12 2008 Retrieved July 30 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e History Cards for WLS fcc gov Retrieved August 24 2018 Facility Technical Data for WLS Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Moss Brett November 14 2013 A Celebration for the WLS Tower radioworld com Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved May 30 2016 0 5 mV m Daytime Groundwave Service Contour WLS 890 kHz Chicago IL fcc gov Federal Communications Commission Retrieved October 20 2021 Childers Scott 2008 Chicago s WLS Radio Charleston South Carolina Arcadia p 83 ISBN 9780738561943 WLS Chicago Celebrates 89th Anniversary with Special Event Talkers Magazine April 12 2013 Retrieved August 24 2018 Gifted Blonde Belle Real Air Veteran Pottsville Republican May 29 1930 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c Hearings Before the United States Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce Commission on Communications United States Government Print Office May 8 1929 p 126 129 Retrieved August 24 2018 The Prairie Farmer Days The History of WLS Radio Scott Childers May 6 2010 Archived from the original on August 4 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 A look at the floor plan for the WLS studios in the Prairie Farmer Building Studio A and its control room are still intact today Richsamuels com February 23 1967 Archived from the original on September 11 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a b c d e f g h Childers Scott WLS The Bright Sound of Chicago Radio The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 20 2018 WLS Talkradio 89 The Talk of Chicago The History of WLS Radio Scott Childers March 2 2010 Archived from the original on September 25 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 WLS move to 190 North State 1990 Fybush com Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 Childers Scott ed 2008 Chicago s WLS Radio Arcadia Publishing pp 11 59 ISBN 9780738561943 WLS History National Barn Dance Wlshistory com April 19 1924 Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 audio file of Herbert Morrison s account of the Hindenburg Disaster for WLS Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 Childers Scott 2008 Chicago s WLS Radio Images of America Illinois Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing p 40 ISBN 9780738561943 a b Strauss Valerie Hines Michael Perspective In Chicago schools closed during a 1937 polio epidemic and kids learned from home over the radio The Washington Post Retrieved August 16 2021 a b c Broadcasting 1935 Yearbook Broadcasting 1935 p 29 Retrieved August 20 2018 Broadcasting 1946 Yearbook Broadcasting 1946 p 98 Retrieved August 25 2018 NBC Acquires WENR Richsamuels com Retrieved August 25 2018 WLS Chicago advertisement Broadcasting March 24 1941 page 2 a b c Eastmond Bruce Karen Fishman and Suzanne Adamko Chapter 2 E N Rauland s Vision WENR The Voice of Service Chicago Radio Broadcasting Station 1924 1954 Library of American Broadcasting Archived from the original on June 20 2007 Retrieved September 5 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Radio Progress August 15 1925 p 40 Retrieved August 24 2018 Radio Age August 1925 p 100 Retrieved August 24 2018 a b Citizen s Radio Callbook A Complete Radio Cyclopedia Vol 6 No 2 Fall 1925 p 16 18 Retrieved August 24 2018 Annual Report of the Federal Radio Commission to the Congress of the United States Federal Radio Commission June 30 1927 p 57 Retrieved August 24 2018 Insull Plans to Construct Super Station Southtown Economist September 9 1927 p 6 Retrieved August 24 2018 Radio Listeners Guide and Call Book Vol 2 No 3 December 1927 p 33 Retrieved August 24 2018 A Souvenir from WENR WENR 1931 Retrieved August 24 2018 NBC Pays Million to Obtain WENR Detroit Free Press July 5 1931 p 7 Retrieved August 24 2018 a b c Samuels Rich The Nineteenth Floor Merchandise Mart 1942 Samuels Rich Archived from the original on February 23 2011 Retrieved January 15 2011 Double Call Letters Are Being Eliminated Washington D C Evening Star June 25 1933 Part 4 page 6 WLS Radio March 1941 After March 29 WLS Changes to a New Place on Your Radio Dial Radio Varieties Retrieved January 14 2017 WENR KYW Station Papers finding aid Library of American Broadcasting Archived from the original on August 22 2012 Retrieved September 5 2013 Sterling Christopher H 2013 Biographical Encyclopedia of American Radio Routledge p 167 Retrieved August 25 2018 Fisher Marc October 1998 A Lifetime on the Radio American Journalism Review Archived from the original on November 20 2010 Retrieved January 23 2011 WLS WENR Chicago Merge Now WLS PDF Broadcasting Telecasting February 8 1954 p 52 Retrieved August 24 2018 AB PT Buys Rest of WLS Purchases Prairie Farmer Publishing Empire PDF Broadcasting November 23 1959 p 76 Retrieved August 24 2018 Zorn Eric Old Discs Jocks Dusted Off In Honor Of Oldies Chicago Tribune April 11 1985 Retrieved August 19 2018 a b Rock Radio Scrapbook Changes Rockradioscrapbook ca Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 The Hot 100 for the week of May 30 1960 Billboard com Retrieved August 19 2018 a b c d e f Chi s WLS Launches New Program Format Billboard May 9 1960 p 11 Retrieved August 20 2018 a b c Childers Scott WLS 50th Anniversary of Rock n Roll The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 20 2018 McCann Tom Ed Grennan Fixture Of Chicago Radio TV Chicago Tribune August 26 2000 Retrieved August 20 2018 Childers Scott Ed Grennan 1922 2000 The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 20 2018 Chicago Museum of Broadcasting History Dick Biondi Hall of Fame Induction 1998 Museum tv Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b This Week In May 5 1960 PDF Mr Pop History Archived from the original PDF on August 9 2011 Retrieved August 20 2018 a b Biro Nick Biondi Out in Chi Mulls Other Offers Billboard June 1 1963 pp 4 46 Retrieved August 20 2018 Bundy June Vox Jox Billboard October 17 1960 p 23 Retrieved August 20 2018 Art Roberts website Artroberts com Archived from the original on January 28 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Nidetz Steve Sunday Mass Looking Again For A Tv Station Chicago Tribune November 13 1994 Retrieved August 19 2018 a b c d e Childers Scott The WLS Schedule 1960 1990 The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 19 2018 Childers Scott The WLS Survey The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 20 2018 a b Larry Lujack Radio Hall of Fame Inducted 2004 Radiohof org 2004 Archived from the original on January 13 2005 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e f g h i Childers Scott WLS AM Stereo 89 The Rock of Chicago The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 19 2018 Kening Dan Big 89 Star John Landecker Back On The Air At WJMK Chicago Tribune January 11 1994 Retrieved August 22 2018 Feder Robert Legendary DJ Landecker quits WLS FM Robert Feder Retrieved August 22 2018 Freeman Kim Vox Jox Billboard March 22 1986 p 26 Retrieved February 4 2019 10 Questions with John Records Landecker All Access Music Group March 19 2013 Retrieved August 22 2018 Childers Scott WLS Musicradio The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 23 2018 Ross Sean First Look WRLL Chicago An Interview with Tommy Edwards Edison Research Archived from the original on October 28 2006 Retrieved August 20 2018 Feder Robert Tommy Edwards signing off on a legendary career Robert Feder September 5 2014 Retrieved August 23 2018 Bob Sirott s first broadcast on WLS from June 8 1973 Chicago Ribfest the Bannos Brothers plus more WLS June 9 2017 Retrieved August 23 2018 Childers Scott 2008 Chicago s WLS Radio Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing p 94 ISBN 9780738561943 Yvonne Daniels Radio Hall of Fame Radio Hall of Fame Archived from the original on March 15 2009 Retrieved June 10 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Billboard February 23 1963 Most Disc Execs Swear By not at Chi s Dick Biondi pages 4 and 8 February 23 1963 Retrieved November 13 2011 Miles Barry ed 2009 The British Invasion The Music the Times the Era Sterling p 55 ISBN 978 1 4027 6976 4 retrieved April 27 2010 Who played the first Beatles record in America Forgotten hits Archived from the original on April 25 2010 Retrieved April 27 2010 The big 89 WLS from Passing Thru by John Rook Johnrook com Archived from the original on November 19 2010 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link WLS Surveys Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved July 7 2011 ARSA Survey Search WLS starting with the first survey on October 14 1960 survey Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved April 30 2012 Jeff Roteman s WLS Website WLS Survey Page Archived from the original on July 21 2010 Retrieved March 12 2012 List of WLS Surveys 1971 through 1986 Archived from the original on May 5 2012 Retrieved March 12 2012 The WLS Big 89 Countdown Archived from the original on March 5 2012 Retrieved March 12 2012 a b Life Is A Rock WCFL amp WLS Versions Chicagoland Radio and Media March 7 2013 Retrieved August 19 2018 Captain amp Tennille scored the song of the summer 40 years ago MeTV August 12 2015 Retrieved August 19 2018 Denver Joel Chicago s Five Way Battle Radio amp Records August 3 1984 Retrieved August 19 2018 Van Matre Lynn The Sweet Smell Of Success March 16 1975 Chicago Tribune May 28 2000 Retrieved August 23 2018 Musicpeople The History of WLS Radio Retrieved August 20 2018 Vox Jox Billboard November 16 1974 p 45 Retrieved August 21 2018 McCormick Moira Dahl Meier Back On Air At WLS AM Billboard October 20 1984 p 14 Retrieved August 23 2018 Zorn Eric Dahl Meier Pull WLS AM Up To 7th In Ratings Chicago Tribune April 18 1985 Retrieved August 23 2018 McCormick Moira Chicago s Bad Boy Returning to WLUP Billboard February 1 1986 p 15 Retrieved August 23 2018 Terry Clifford Dahl Meier WLS Just Don t Match Chicago Tribune February 20 1986 Retrieved August 23 2018 Broadcasting Cablecasting Yearbook 1985 Broadcasting Cablecasting 1985 p B 80 Retrieved August 19 2018 Anderson Liz Sex Is Her Business Chicago Tribune September 11 1985 Retrieved August 19 2018 Broadcasting Cablecasting Yearbook 1988 Broadcasting Cablecasting 1988 p B 85 Retrieved August 19 2018 Feder Robert June 22 1989 Radio stars will fall as WLS turns to hot talk format Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on September 11 2016 Retrieved April 30 2018 a b Smith Ronald P 2002 Chicago Top 40 Charts 1980 1990 p xi Retrieved August 19 2018 Feder Robert September 7 1989 WLS AM tries to talk its way out of radio wasteland Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on September 11 2016 Retrieved April 30 2018 Bruce DuMont Beyond the Beltway WLS Radio 890AM Archived from the original on February 11 2011 Retrieved January 15 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link WLS Talkradio 89 The Talk Of Chicago wlshistory com Archived from the original on October 27 2017 Retrieved April 30 2018 audio file Lujack and Edwards The Big 89 Rewind May 28 2007 Reelradio com Retrieved November 13 2011 YouTube video of Big 89 Rewind 2007 August 2 2007 Archived from the original on June 12 2014 Retrieved November 13 2011 via YouTube YouTube video of WLS Rewind 2008 September 11 2008 Archived from the original on June 12 2014 Retrieved November 13 2011 via YouTube Disney February 6 2006 ABC Radio To Merge With Citadel Broadcasting Disney Archived from the original on July 9 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Disney June 12 2007 Disney and Citadel Announce Completion of ABC Radio Merger Disney Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Feder Robert June 13 2007 Over and out ABC ends 47 year run as new owners take over legendary radio stations Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on January 28 2018 Retrieved April 30 2018 Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting Atlanta Business Journal September 16 2011 Archived from the original on September 24 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Smith Mitch September 9 2013 Longtime radio host Don Wade dies at 72 Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on January 31 2017 Retrieved January 19 2017 Feder Robert Cumulus Media moving to NBC Tower Robert Feder November 18 2015 Retrieved August 19 2018 Greenhouse Mark Cumulus Emphasizes Style in the Windy City Radio January 18 2018 Retrieved August 19 2018 Feder Robert They re back WLS hires Sirott amp Murciano for midday show Robert Feder December 13 2016 Retrieved August 19 2018 Feder Robert Sirott amp Murciano cut from new WLS talk lineup Robert Feder December 13 2017 Retrieved August 19 2018 Feder Robert July 16 2015 Double play WLS signs radio deals for White Sox Bulls robertfeder com Archived from the original on May 30 2016 Retrieved May 30 2016 WGN Inks Multiyear Rights Deal With Chicago White Sox insideradio com February 15 2018 Retrieved April 30 2018 a b Notre Dame Basketball WLS Radio Archived from the original on March 2 2011 Retrieved January 15 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Notre Dame Football WLS Radio Archived from the original on February 8 2011 Retrieved January 15 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Chicago Fire Games to Air on WLS WLS Radio April 26 2023 Retrieved May 13 2023 Money And Local News Are Focus Of New One Hour Afternoon Shows On WLS AM Insideradio com October 5 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to WLS AM Official website WLS in the FCC AM station database WLS in Nielsen Audio s AM station database Chicago s Legendary WLS Part I The Studios 2004 Chicago s Legendary WLS Part II The Transmitter 2004 Irma Glen collection at University of Maryland Libraries WENR KYW station collection at University of Maryland Libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WLS AM amp oldid 1218682825, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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