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WTMJ (AM)

WTMJ (620 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Owned by Good Karma Brands, the station has a news/talk radio format. Its sign-on dates back to 1922 and for most of its history it was owned by The Milwaukee Journal newspaper. On weekdays, it airs news blocks during drive time, local talk shows in middays, sports in the evening and syndicated shows in late nights. It is the flagship station for Milwaukee Brewers baseball and Milwaukee Bucks basketball.

WTMJ
Broadcast areaGreater Milwaukee
Frequency620 kHz
Branding620 WTMJ
Programming
FormatNews/talk
NetworkABC News Radio
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WGKB, WKTI
History
First air date
May 15, 1922; 101 years ago (1922-05-15) (as WCAY)
Former call signs
  • WCAY (1922–1925)
  • WKAF (1925–1927)
Former frequencies
  • 833 kHz (1922–1923)
  • 833 & 485 kHz (1923)
  • 1150 kHz (1923–1924)
  • 1130 kHz (1924–1925)
  • 1150 kHz (1925–1927)
  • 1020 kHz (1927–1928)
Call sign meaning
The Milwaukee Journal
Technical information
Facility ID74096
ClassB
Power
  • 50,000 watts day
  • 10,000 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
42°42′28″N 88°03′57″W / 42.70778°N 88.06583°W / 42.70778; -88.06583
Translator(s)103.3 W277CV (Milwaukee)
Repeater(s)94.5 WKTI-HD2 (Milwaukee)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewtmj.com

By day, it transmits 50,000 watts, the maximum for AM radio stations in the United States. At night, to avoid interference to other stations, it reduces power to 10,000 watts.[1] In addition, it broadcasts on 250-watt FM translator W277CV at 103.3 MHz.

History edit

WCAY and WKAF edit

The station was first licensed, with the sequentially assigned call letters WCAY, on May 15, 1922. It was owned by the Kesselman O'Driscoll Company, a music house located at 517-519 Grand Avenue (now Wisconsin Avenue) in Milwaukee. It was initially authorized to broadcast on the "entertainment" wavelength of 360 meters (833 kHz).[2][3] On May 24, 1923, WCAY was reassigned to 1150 kHz.[4][3] The next year ownership was transferred to the Milwaukee Civic Broadcasting Association.[5]

The station license was briefly allowed to lapse in 1925,[6] but it was quickly relicensed as WKAF to the WKAF Broadcasting Co., located at 130 Second Street.[7] The station was now jointly owned by Kesselman-O'Driscoll Co., the Hotel Antlers (the studio location), and station engineer H. L. Ford. WKAF's first regular broadcast was held on October 20, 1925.[8]

WTMJ edit

On April 20, 1927, WKAF was purchased by The Milwaukee Journal for $16,350. The Journal changed the call sign to WTMJ on May 10 to reflect the newspaper's name.[9][10][11] Station facilities were upgraded, including the building of a new transmitter site in Brookfield, west of Milwaukee. The new WTMJ also affiliated with the NBC Red Network.[12]

The Journal already had extensive experience with radio broadcasting. On May 1, 1922, it had sponsored the debut program on WAAK, Milwaukee's first radio station, which was owned by the local division of the Gimbel's department store chain.[13] On January 24, 1925, the newspaper entered into an agreement as a joint, and dominant, partner in the operation of Marquette University's station, WHAD, which limited the university's programming to just one and one-half hour on Friday evenings. The newspaper's operations at WHAD ended on August 15, 1927, with the university returning to full responsibility for the station.[14] WTMJ aired a full service format featuring a mixture of music, news, talk and local personalities along with sports play-by-play, as well as dramas, comedies and other programs from NBC.

WTMJ made its debut broadcast on July 25, 1927.[15][11] That day's broadcast featured music by the WTMJ Orchestra and included a remote broadcast featuring Bill Carlsen's orchestra. (Carlsen was later hired by WTMJ and went on to become Wisconsin's most widely known radio and television weather forecaster.) On September 11, 1927, WTMJ was assigned to 1020 kHz.[9] WTMJ also began broadcasting University of Wisconsin Badgers football games that year.[16]

AM 620 edit

On November 11, 1928, as part of a major nationwide allocation under the provisions of the Federal Radio Commission's General Order 40, WTMJ was reassigned to its current frequency of 620 kHz. In November 1929, WTMJ broadcast a Green Bay Packers game for the first time.[12][17]

WTMJ was indirectly involved with the installation of the first directional antenna by a radio station in the United States. In 1929 a joint operation in Clearwater, Florida, WFLA-WSUN, was also assigned to 620 kHz.[18] WTMJ immediately complained that at the initial power allocation the Florida stations were causing significant interference to WTMJ's coverage, especially at night. WFLA-WSUN turned to the engineering community to determine whether a then-theoretical concept of a directional antenna could be installed to reduce the Florida station's signal toward Milwaukee. This led to the successful development in 1932 of the first modern AM directional antenna system.[19] (WFLA moved to 970 kHz in 1941, with WSUN taking its place in Tampa, followed by the current-day WDAE)

 
1952 advertisement for WTMJ[20]

Radio City studios edit

 
Radio City, the home of WTMJ radio from 1942 until 2022; the building remains in use by WTMJ-TV.

In 1942, a new facility, The Milwaukee Journal's Radio City, opened for WTMJ and its FM sister station, W55M (later WMFM and WTMJ-FM), in addition to the yet-to-come WTMJ-TV. An article in the trade magazine Broadcasting reported that the building was the "first ever designed to house all three types of broadcasting".[21]

A 1944 survey by The Milwaukee Journal found WTMJ to be the most popular radio station in Milwaukee, especially for local morning show Top of the Morning and NBC radio's The Hour of Charm in evenings. WTMJ had gross advertising revenue of over $1.2 million.[22] Gordon Hinkley began a near three-decade career with WTMJ in 1951, starting as a staff announcer and host of the Sunday morning beautiful music show Invitation to Beauty.[23]

Beginning in 1961, WTMJ promoted Hinkley to host its morning drive program Top O' the Morning and call-in talk show Ask Your Neighbor.[23] Top O' the Morning was the highest rated morning show in Milwaukee for five straight Arbitron surveys from summer 1977 to summer 1978.[24] Hinkley hosted Top O' the Morning until 1984.[23]

Sports edit

In 1971, WTMJ began broadcasting Milwaukee Brewers games. WEMP broadcast the inaugural Brewers season the previous year. WTMJ temporarily lost the Brewers to rival WISN in 1981 and 1982.[25]

Having been the most popular station in local Arbitron ratings, WTMJ tied Top 40 station WKTI in the top ratings spot in by spring 1990.[26]

Switch to news/talk edit

By the summer of 1990, most of the music shows had been discontinued. WTMJ began to be listed as a news/talk station in the Arbitron ratings.[27] In 1993, WTMJ hired two new talk show hosts, liberal Jay Marvin and conservative Charlie Sykes.[28][29] Sykes joined WTMJ from rival WISN.[29] Marvin left for WLS in Chicago after seven months.[28]

Also in 1993, WTMJ lost the production rights to Wisconsin Badgers sports broadcasts because an employee submitted the bid for the rights minutes after the deadline had passed. Though the station no longer originated the network, it continued to be the network flagship under Learfield Communications, the new rightsholders.[16][30]

Power increase edit

WTMJ was granted permission in 1995 to upgrade to 50,000 watts days and 10,000 watts nights from a new directional antenna. It uses a six-tower array, located in Union Grove, south of Milwaukee.[31]

In November 1997, WTMJ switched its national news provider from CBS to ABC. WTMJ returned to CBS on October 1, 2001.[32]

 
WTMJ logo from 2001 to 2013.

In 2002, Sykes and fellow WTMJ host Jeff Wagner led a campaign to recall Milwaukee County Executive Tom Ament, who was embroiled in scandal for abusing the county pension system; Ament controversially retired at the end of February 2002, rather than resign.[33][34]

In 2013, WTMJ made changes to its programming and management. In March, Journal Communications fired program director Joe Scialfa, who had been with the station for 14 years beginning as producer for the Charlie Sykes show.[35] That November, WTMJ elected not to renew its contract with the University of Wisconsin, thus ending over eight decades of broadcasting Wisconsin Badgers sports by 2014. WOKY and WRIT became the new Milwaukee affiliates for the Wisconsin sports network effective in the 2014–15 season.[30][36]

Changes in ownership edit

Journal Communications and the E. W. Scripps Company announced on July 30, 2014, that the two companies would merge to create a new broadcast company under the E.W. Scripps Company name that will own the two companies' broadcast properties, including WTMJ, WTMJ-TV, and WKTI-FM. The deal separated the WTMJ stations from the Journal Sentinel after nine decades, as the two companies' newspapers were spun off into a separate company under the Journal Media Group name (that company merged with Gannett itself in April 2016).

Both WTMJ Radio and WTMJ-TV eventually partnered with the Milwaukee Business Journal after the sale for business coverage). The transaction was completed on April 1, 2015; E.W. Scripps will also continue to originate the Packers and Brewers radio networks.[37]

Sykes hosted his final show on WTMJ on December 19, 2016, nearly a month after the election of Donald Trump as U.S. president.[38] In an essay for The New York Times, Sykes said: "The conservative media is broken and the conservative movement deeply compromised."[39]

FM translator edit

On February 22, 2018, WTMJ began simulcasting on a monaural FM translator, W277CV at 103.3 MHz. It has its transmitter on the WTMJ-TV/WKTI tower.[40]

The transmitter, formerly individually licensed to Frank Glass McCoy and leased to Scripps (who owns the physical tower and transmitter assets) and operated by Good Karma Brands, was formerly licensed to Waukegan, Illinois and translated Kenosha public radio station WGTD before the move of the translator to Milwaukee.[41][42] McCoy sold the translator license to Auslator, LLC in May 2019.

Additionally, the station is simulcast at 88.5 FM within the campus of American Family Field, allowing fans attending Brewers games to listen to the radio play-by-play of the game without the broadcast delay presented both by the satellite delay to WTMJ's studios, and for regulatory reasons.[43]

Good Karma Brands edit

On July 27, 2018, as part of its exit from radio, Scripps announced the sale of WTMJ and WKTI to Good Karma Brands. The stations became part of a cluster with ESPN Radio affiliate WAUK.[44] Morgan Murphy Media and other local groups have made investments in Good Karma Brands to back the purchase.[45] Good Karma took control of WTMJ and WKTI on November 1, 2018, thus separating the AM station from its TV cousin for the first time.[46] Shortly after, WTMJ's HD Radio transmitter was taken out of service as the station had since established an FM translator.

After trailing other stations, including iHeartMedia news/talk station WISN, for the first three months of 2021, WTMJ returned to the top of Milwaukee radio ratings in April 2021.[47] On October 27, 2021, the Green Bay Packers announced that it would end its longtime association with WTMJ at the end of the season, with WRNW taking over the rights in 2022; production of the broadcasts had been transferred from WTMJ to the team in 2018.[48] WTMJ's final Packers broadcast was the NFC Divisional game, a 13–10 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on January 22, 2022.[49]

On September 28, 2022, WTMJ, WKTI and WGKB departed Radio City for new showcase studios based in The Avenue MKE, within the Third Street Market Hall, two blocks from where it first broadcast as WCAY only a few months after the license's centennial.[50]

Programming edit

With hourly news updates from ABC News Radio, WTMJ airs news programming in morning and afternoon drive times. During the midday, the station airs live, local talk shows with Jeff Wagner and Steve Scaffidi. In the evenings, WTMJ has a three-hour sports talk show WTMJ Nights followed by nationally syndicated programs in late night hours including The Ramsey Show, Rich Valdés America at Night, Our American Stories with Lee Habeeb and This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal.[51][52]

During weekends the station airs a mixture of local how-to programming, talk shows, local sports talk programs, sports play-by-play and national talk shows, for instance The Truth About Your Future with Ric Edelman and Compass Media Networks' This Weekend with Gordon Deal, in addition to ABC News' Perspective news magazine, the CBS News Weekend Roundup, and CBS's podcast The Takeout with Major Garrett.[51]

WTMJ has broadcast the Milwaukee Bucks basketball team and Milwaukee Brewers baseball team for most of their histories.[17] From 1929 to 2021, WTMJ served as the flagship radio station for the Green Bay Packers football team.

Studios and transmitter edit

For eighty years, WTMJ was based at 720 East Capitol Drive in Milwaukee, in an Art Deco facility known as "Radio City" in tribute to the New York complex of the same name.

WTMJ and WKTI are the two primary entry points in southeastern Wisconsin for the state's Emergency Alert System (EAS) alerts.[53] WTMJ's transmitter site is in Union Grove.

As of February 22, 2018, WTMJ's HD Radio simulcast on WKTI-HD2 (launched after Scripps' assumption of ownership) is broadcast within the core Milwaukee metro region by translator W277CV (103.3 FM), which is licensed to Milwaukee and transmits from the WTMJ-TV/WKTI tower just north of Radio City.

WTMJ broadcasts with 50,000 watts during daytime hours, and 10,000 watts during nighttime from a six-tower site in Union Grove, south of Milwaukee. Its daytime signal can be heard in much of eastern Wisconsin and as far away as Chicago.[16] Four towers are used during the day, providing city-grade coverage to most of eastern Wisconsin (including Madison and Green Bay) and northern Illinois, with most of the Chicago area getting at least a grade B signal. At night, power is fed to all six towers in a directional pattern, concentrating the signal in Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Chicago.

The station also regularly rates outside the Milwaukee market, doing so in Sheboygan despite that city being within its own radio market.[54]

References edit

  1. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WTMJ
  2. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, June 1, 1922, page 3.
  3. ^ a b "History Cards for WTMJ". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  4. ^ "Alterations and corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, June 1, 1923, page 11.
  5. ^ "Alterations and corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, September 2, 1924, page 5.
  6. ^ "Strike out all particulars", Radio Service Bulletin, August 1, 1925, page 7.
  7. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, September 1, 1925, page 3.
  8. ^ "WKAF Takes Place on Air" by BCL, Milwaukee Journal, October 21, 1925, page 15.
  9. ^ a b The Journal Company vs. Federal Radio Commission, 5163, 151-155 (D.C. Cir. 1930).
  10. ^ "Revised List of Radio Stations and Wavelengths". The Washington Times. May 24, 1927. p. 14. Retrieved February 13, 2022 – via Library of Congress.
  11. ^ a b . WTMJ. Archived from the original on April 4, 2005. Retrieved February 12, 2022.
  12. ^ a b . Journal Communications. Archived from the original on June 11, 2002. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  13. ^ "Radio Tunes to Be Sent From Gimbels", Milwaukee Journal, May 1, 1922, page 1. WAAK was deleted on December 1, 1923.
  14. ^ Marquette University entry, Education's Own Stations, S. E. Frost, Jr., 1937, pages 193-196. WHAD was deleted on May 29, 1934.
  15. ^ "Journal's Radio Roots Go Back 20 Years; WTMJ History Told", Milwaukee Journal, August 23, 1942, page 6 (wisconsinhistory.org)
  16. ^ a b c "He's back! Mike Ditka!". Chicago Tribune. August 17, 1993. Archived from the original on June 3, 2021. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  17. ^ a b "Packers Radio Network". Green Bay Packers. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  18. ^ "Alterations and corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, November 30, 1929, page 10.
  19. ^ "The Development of the Directional AM Broadcast Antenna" by John F. Schneider, 2019 (theradiohistorian.org)
  20. ^ WTMJ (advertisement), Broadcasting, September 15, 1952, page 17.
  21. ^ "Fifth Anniversary" (PDF). Broadcasting. September 1, 1947. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  22. ^ "Management, P.S. & Prestige Sells". The Billboard. 56 (34): 6, 11. August 19, 1944. Retrieved June 8, 2021 – via Google Books.
  23. ^ a b c "Gordon Hinkley". Wisconsin Broadcasting Museum. 8 January 2014. Retrieved June 17, 2021.
  24. ^ "Billboard Arbitron DJ rating performance". Billboard. Vol. 91, no. 14. April 7, 1979. p. 40. Retrieved June 17, 2021 – via Google Books.
  25. ^ Dudek, Duane (October 11, 2011). . Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Archived from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  26. ^ Zahn, Michael (April 29, 1990). "WKTI catches WTMJ in race for top station". The Milwaukee Journal. p. 17. Retrieved June 3, 2021 – via NewsBank.
  27. ^ "12+ Summer '90 Arbitron Results" (PDF). Radio & Records: 45. October 12, 1990. Retrieved June 16, 2021.
  28. ^ a b Kening, Dan (November 9, 1993). "Meet Jay Marvin, WLS' late-night, left-wing talk host". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on June 16, 2021. Retrieved June 16, 2021.
  29. ^ a b Chandler, Kurt (July 2000). . Milwaukee Magazine. Archived from the original on November 6, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  30. ^ a b Dudek, Duane (November 22, 2013). . Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  31. ^ "FCCdata.org - powered by REC".
  32. ^ . Milwaukee Business Journal. August 13, 2001. Archived from the original on April 19, 2003. Retrieved February 12, 2022.
  33. ^ Kissinger, Meg (February 9, 2002). . Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Archived from the original on August 3, 2002. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  34. ^ Borowski, Greg J.; Johnson, Mike (February 22, 2002). . Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Archived from the original on September 14, 2002. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  35. ^ Dudek, Duane (March 19, 2013). . Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Archived from the original on May 21, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  36. ^ Kirchen, Rich (December 2, 2013). . Milwaukee Business Journal. Archived from the original on December 7, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  37. ^ "E.W. Scripps, Journal Merging Broadcast Ops". TVNewsCheck. July 30, 2014. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  38. ^ Glauber, Bill (December 19, 2016). . Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  39. ^ Sykes, Charles J. (December 15, 2016). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on December 22, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  40. ^ Venta, Lance (23 February 2018). "WTMJ Launches FM Signal". RadioInsight. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  41. ^ Ellis, Jon (25 July 2017). "Broadcasting News-July 2017". Northpine.com. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  42. ^ "WTMJ's FM Expansion Plans Threatened By Translator Dispute". 24 July 2017. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  43. ^ "American Family Field Fan Guidelines". Milwaukee Brewers, Major League Baseball. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  44. ^ "Good Karma Pays Off For Craig Karmazin". Radio & Television Business Report. 27 July 2018. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  45. ^ "Morgan Murphy Media Invests In Good Karma Brands' WTMJ-WKTI/Milwaukee Purchase". All Access. Retrieved 2018-09-28.
  46. ^ "Scripps Completes Two More Pieces Of Radio Division Sale". Inside Radio. November 2, 2018. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-06-01.
  48. ^ Kirchen, Rich. "Green Bay Packers switch Milwaukee radio home from WTMJ-AM to iHeartMedia sports station". Milwaukee Business Journal. Retrieved October 27, 2021.
  49. ^ Spaulding, Mike (January 22, 2022). "Packers playoff run ends after one game; fall to 49ers 13-10". 620 WTMJ. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  50. ^ Albers, Andrea (28 September 2022). "WTMJ Radio leaving Capitol Drive location after 80 years". WTMJ-TV. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  51. ^ a b "Schedule". 620 WTMJ. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  52. ^ "WTMJ Nights".
  53. ^ "Wisconsin EAS Plan" (September 2015)
  54. ^ Ratings, Industry Directory and Program Supplier Guide (PDF). Vol. 1 [Special Supplement]. Radio & Records. 2005. p. 103.

External links edit

  • Official site
  • WTMJ in the FCC AM station database
  • WTMJ in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • W277CV in the FCC FM station database
  • W277CV at FCCdata.org
  • FCC History Cards for WTMJ (covering 1922-1980 as WCAY / WKAF / WTMJ)

wtmj, wtmj, commercial, radio, station, milwaukee, wisconsin, owned, good, karma, brands, station, news, talk, radio, format, sign, dates, back, 1922, most, history, owned, milwaukee, journal, newspaper, weekdays, airs, news, blocks, during, drive, time, local. WTMJ 620 kHz is a commercial AM radio station in Milwaukee Wisconsin Owned by Good Karma Brands the station has a news talk radio format Its sign on dates back to 1922 and for most of its history it was owned by The Milwaukee Journal newspaper On weekdays it airs news blocks during drive time local talk shows in middays sports in the evening and syndicated shows in late nights It is the flagship station for Milwaukee Brewers baseball and Milwaukee Bucks basketball WTMJMilwaukee WisconsinBroadcast areaGreater MilwaukeeFrequency620 kHzBranding620 WTMJProgrammingFormatNews talkNetworkABC News RadioAffiliationsCBS News Radio Compass Media Networks Westwood One Milwaukee Brewers Radio Network Milwaukee Bucks Radio NetworkOwnershipOwnerGood Karma Brands Good Karma Broadcasting L L C Sister stationsWGKB WKTIHistoryFirst air dateMay 15 1922 101 years ago 1922 05 15 as WCAY Former call signsWCAY 1922 1925 WKAF 1925 1927 Former frequencies833 kHz 1922 1923 833 amp 485 kHz 1923 1150 kHz 1923 1924 1130 kHz 1924 1925 1150 kHz 1925 1927 1020 kHz 1927 1928 Call sign meaningThe Milwaukee JournalTechnical informationFacility ID74096ClassBPower50 000 watts day10 000 watts nightTransmitter coordinates42 42 28 N 88 03 57 W 42 70778 N 88 06583 W 42 70778 88 06583Translator s 103 3 W277CV Milwaukee Repeater s 94 5 WKTI HD2 Milwaukee LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsitewtmj wbr com By day it transmits 50 000 watts the maximum for AM radio stations in the United States At night to avoid interference to other stations it reduces power to 10 000 watts 1 In addition it broadcasts on 250 watt FM translator W277CV at 103 3 MHz Contents 1 History 1 1 WCAY and WKAF 1 2 WTMJ 1 3 AM 620 1 4 Radio City studios 1 5 Sports 1 6 Switch to news talk 1 7 Power increase 1 8 Changes in ownership 1 9 FM translator 1 10 Good Karma Brands 2 Programming 3 Studios and transmitter 4 References 5 External linksHistory editWCAY and WKAF edit The station was first licensed with the sequentially assigned call letters WCAY on May 15 1922 It was owned by the Kesselman O Driscoll Company a music house located at 517 519 Grand Avenue now Wisconsin Avenue in Milwaukee It was initially authorized to broadcast on the entertainment wavelength of 360 meters 833 kHz 2 3 On May 24 1923 WCAY was reassigned to 1150 kHz 4 3 The next year ownership was transferred to the Milwaukee Civic Broadcasting Association 5 The station license was briefly allowed to lapse in 1925 6 but it was quickly relicensed as WKAF to the WKAF Broadcasting Co located at 130 Second Street 7 The station was now jointly owned by Kesselman O Driscoll Co the Hotel Antlers the studio location and station engineer H L Ford WKAF s first regular broadcast was held on October 20 1925 8 WTMJ edit On April 20 1927 WKAF was purchased by The Milwaukee Journal for 16 350 The Journal changed the call sign to WTMJ on May 10 to reflect the newspaper s name 9 10 11 Station facilities were upgraded including the building of a new transmitter site in Brookfield west of Milwaukee The new WTMJ also affiliated with the NBC Red Network 12 The Journal already had extensive experience with radio broadcasting On May 1 1922 it had sponsored the debut program on WAAK Milwaukee s first radio station which was owned by the local division of the Gimbel s department store chain 13 On January 24 1925 the newspaper entered into an agreement as a joint and dominant partner in the operation of Marquette University s station WHAD which limited the university s programming to just one and one half hour on Friday evenings The newspaper s operations at WHAD ended on August 15 1927 with the university returning to full responsibility for the station 14 WTMJ aired a full service format featuring a mixture of music news talk and local personalities along with sports play by play as well as dramas comedies and other programs from NBC WTMJ made its debut broadcast on July 25 1927 15 11 That day s broadcast featured music by the WTMJ Orchestra and included a remote broadcast featuring Bill Carlsen s orchestra Carlsen was later hired by WTMJ and went on to become Wisconsin s most widely known radio and television weather forecaster On September 11 1927 WTMJ was assigned to 1020 kHz 9 WTMJ also began broadcasting University of Wisconsin Badgers football games that year 16 AM 620 edit On November 11 1928 as part of a major nationwide allocation under the provisions of the Federal Radio Commission s General Order 40 WTMJ was reassigned to its current frequency of 620 kHz In November 1929 WTMJ broadcast a Green Bay Packers game for the first time 12 17 WTMJ was indirectly involved with the installation of the first directional antenna by a radio station in the United States In 1929 a joint operation in Clearwater Florida WFLA WSUN was also assigned to 620 kHz 18 WTMJ immediately complained that at the initial power allocation the Florida stations were causing significant interference to WTMJ s coverage especially at night WFLA WSUN turned to the engineering community to determine whether a then theoretical concept of a directional antenna could be installed to reduce the Florida station s signal toward Milwaukee This led to the successful development in 1932 of the first modern AM directional antenna system 19 WFLA moved to 970 kHz in 1941 with WSUN taking its place in Tampa followed by the current day WDAE nbsp 1952 advertisement for WTMJ 20 Radio City studios edit nbsp Radio City the home of WTMJ radio from 1942 until 2022 the building remains in use by WTMJ TV In 1942 a new facility The Milwaukee Journal s Radio City opened for WTMJ and its FM sister station W55M later WMFM and WTMJ FM in addition to the yet to come WTMJ TV An article in the trade magazine Broadcasting reported that the building was the first ever designed to house all three types of broadcasting 21 A 1944 survey by The Milwaukee Journal found WTMJ to be the most popular radio station in Milwaukee especially for local morning show Top of the Morning and NBC radio s The Hour of Charm in evenings WTMJ had gross advertising revenue of over 1 2 million 22 Gordon Hinkley began a near three decade career with WTMJ in 1951 starting as a staff announcer and host of the Sunday morning beautiful music show Invitation to Beauty 23 Beginning in 1961 WTMJ promoted Hinkley to host its morning drive program Top O the Morning and call in talk show Ask Your Neighbor 23 Top O the Morning was the highest rated morning show in Milwaukee for five straight Arbitron surveys from summer 1977 to summer 1978 24 Hinkley hosted Top O the Morning until 1984 23 Sports edit In 1971 WTMJ began broadcasting Milwaukee Brewers games WEMP broadcast the inaugural Brewers season the previous year WTMJ temporarily lost the Brewers to rival WISN in 1981 and 1982 25 Having been the most popular station in local Arbitron ratings WTMJ tied Top 40 station WKTI in the top ratings spot in by spring 1990 26 Switch to news talk edit By the summer of 1990 most of the music shows had been discontinued WTMJ began to be listed as a news talk station in the Arbitron ratings 27 In 1993 WTMJ hired two new talk show hosts liberal Jay Marvin and conservative Charlie Sykes 28 29 Sykes joined WTMJ from rival WISN 29 Marvin left for WLS in Chicago after seven months 28 Also in 1993 WTMJ lost the production rights to Wisconsin Badgers sports broadcasts because an employee submitted the bid for the rights minutes after the deadline had passed Though the station no longer originated the network it continued to be the network flagship under Learfield Communications the new rightsholders 16 30 Power increase edit WTMJ was granted permission in 1995 to upgrade to 50 000 watts days and 10 000 watts nights from a new directional antenna It uses a six tower array located in Union Grove south of Milwaukee 31 In November 1997 WTMJ switched its national news provider from CBS to ABC WTMJ returned to CBS on October 1 2001 32 nbsp WTMJ logo from 2001 to 2013 In 2002 Sykes and fellow WTMJ host Jeff Wagner led a campaign to recall Milwaukee County Executive Tom Ament who was embroiled in scandal for abusing the county pension system Ament controversially retired at the end of February 2002 rather than resign 33 34 In 2013 WTMJ made changes to its programming and management In March Journal Communications fired program director Joe Scialfa who had been with the station for 14 years beginning as producer for the Charlie Sykes show 35 That November WTMJ elected not to renew its contract with the University of Wisconsin thus ending over eight decades of broadcasting Wisconsin Badgers sports by 2014 WOKY and WRIT became the new Milwaukee affiliates for the Wisconsin sports network effective in the 2014 15 season 30 36 Changes in ownership edit Journal Communications and the E W Scripps Company announced on July 30 2014 that the two companies would merge to create a new broadcast company under the E W Scripps Company name that will own the two companies broadcast properties including WTMJ WTMJ TV and WKTI FM The deal separated the WTMJ stations from the Journal Sentinel after nine decades as the two companies newspapers were spun off into a separate company under the Journal Media Group name that company merged with Gannett itself in April 2016 Both WTMJ Radio and WTMJ TV eventually partnered with the Milwaukee Business Journal after the sale for business coverage The transaction was completed on April 1 2015 E W Scripps will also continue to originate the Packers and Brewers radio networks 37 Sykes hosted his final show on WTMJ on December 19 2016 nearly a month after the election of Donald Trump as U S president 38 In an essay for The New York Times Sykes said The conservative media is broken and the conservative movement deeply compromised 39 FM translator edit On February 22 2018 WTMJ began simulcasting on a monaural FM translator W277CV at 103 3 MHz It has its transmitter on the WTMJ TV WKTI tower 40 The transmitter formerly individually licensed to Frank Glass McCoy and leased to Scripps who owns the physical tower and transmitter assets and operated by Good Karma Brands was formerly licensed to Waukegan Illinois and translated Kenosha public radio station WGTD before the move of the translator to Milwaukee 41 42 McCoy sold the translator license to Auslator LLC in May 2019 Additionally the station is simulcast at 88 5 FM within the campus of American Family Field allowing fans attending Brewers games to listen to the radio play by play of the game without the broadcast delay presented both by the satellite delay to WTMJ s studios and for regulatory reasons 43 Good Karma Brands edit On July 27 2018 as part of its exit from radio Scripps announced the sale of WTMJ and WKTI to Good Karma Brands The stations became part of a cluster with ESPN Radio affiliate WAUK 44 Morgan Murphy Media and other local groups have made investments in Good Karma Brands to back the purchase 45 Good Karma took control of WTMJ and WKTI on November 1 2018 thus separating the AM station from its TV cousin for the first time 46 Shortly after WTMJ s HD Radio transmitter was taken out of service as the station had since established an FM translator After trailing other stations including iHeartMedia news talk station WISN for the first three months of 2021 WTMJ returned to the top of Milwaukee radio ratings in April 2021 47 On October 27 2021 the Green Bay Packers announced that it would end its longtime association with WTMJ at the end of the season with WRNW taking over the rights in 2022 production of the broadcasts had been transferred from WTMJ to the team in 2018 48 WTMJ s final Packers broadcast was the NFC Divisional game a 13 10 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on January 22 2022 49 On September 28 2022 WTMJ WKTI and WGKB departed Radio City for new showcase studios based in The Avenue MKE within the Third Street Market Hall two blocks from where it first broadcast as WCAY only a few months after the license s centennial 50 Programming editWith hourly news updates from ABC News Radio WTMJ airs news programming in morning and afternoon drive times During the midday the station airs live local talk shows with Jeff Wagner and Steve Scaffidi In the evenings WTMJ has a three hour sports talk show WTMJ Nights followed by nationally syndicated programs in late night hours including The Ramsey Show Rich Valdes America at Night Our American Stories with Lee Habeeb and This Morning America s First News with Gordon Deal 51 52 During weekends the station airs a mixture of local how to programming talk shows local sports talk programs sports play by play and national talk shows for instance The Truth About Your Future with Ric Edelman and Compass Media Networks This Weekend with Gordon Deal in addition to ABC News Perspective news magazine the CBS News Weekend Roundup and CBS s podcast The Takeout with Major Garrett 51 WTMJ has broadcast the Milwaukee Bucks basketball team and Milwaukee Brewers baseball team for most of their histories 17 From 1929 to 2021 WTMJ served as the flagship radio station for the Green Bay Packers football team Studios and transmitter editFor eighty years WTMJ was based at 720 East Capitol Drive in Milwaukee in an Art Deco facility known as Radio City in tribute to the New York complex of the same name WTMJ and WKTI are the two primary entry points in southeastern Wisconsin for the state s Emergency Alert System EAS alerts 53 WTMJ s transmitter site is in Union Grove As of February 22 2018 WTMJ s HD Radio simulcast on WKTI HD2 launched after Scripps assumption of ownership is broadcast within the core Milwaukee metro region by translator W277CV 103 3 FM which is licensed to Milwaukee and transmits from the WTMJ TV WKTI tower just north of Radio City WTMJ broadcasts with 50 000 watts during daytime hours and 10 000 watts during nighttime from a six tower site in Union Grove south of Milwaukee Its daytime signal can be heard in much of eastern Wisconsin and as far away as Chicago 16 Four towers are used during the day providing city grade coverage to most of eastern Wisconsin including Madison and Green Bay and northern Illinois with most of the Chicago area getting at least a grade B signal At night power is fed to all six towers in a directional pattern concentrating the signal in Milwaukee Green Bay and Chicago The station also regularly rates outside the Milwaukee market doing so in Sheboygan despite that city being within its own radio market 54 References edit Radio Locator com WTMJ New Stations Radio Service Bulletin June 1 1922 page 3 a b History Cards for WTMJ Federal Communications Commission Retrieved June 3 2021 Alterations and corrections Radio Service Bulletin June 1 1923 page 11 Alterations and corrections Radio Service Bulletin September 2 1924 page 5 Strike out all particulars Radio Service Bulletin August 1 1925 page 7 New Stations Radio Service Bulletin September 1 1925 page 3 WKAF Takes Place on Air by BCL Milwaukee Journal October 21 1925 page 15 a b The Journal Company vs Federal Radio Commission 5163 151 155 D C Cir 1930 Revised List of Radio Stations and Wavelengths The Washington Times May 24 1927 p 14 Retrieved February 13 2022 via Library of Congress a b Newsradio 620 WTMJ s storied history WTMJ Archived from the original on April 4 2005 Retrieved February 12 2022 a b Our History and Heritage Journal Communications Archived from the original on June 11 2002 Retrieved May 30 2021 Radio Tunes to Be Sent From Gimbels Milwaukee Journal May 1 1922 page 1 WAAK was deleted on December 1 1923 Marquette University entry Education s Own Stations S E Frost Jr 1937 pages 193 196 WHAD was deleted on May 29 1934 Journal s Radio Roots Go Back 20 Years WTMJ History Told Milwaukee Journal August 23 1942 page 6 wisconsinhistory org a b c He s back Mike Ditka Chicago Tribune August 17 1993 Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved June 3 2021 a b Packers Radio Network Green Bay Packers Retrieved June 3 2021 Alterations and corrections Radio Service Bulletin November 30 1929 page 10 The Development of the Directional AM Broadcast Antenna by John F Schneider 2019 theradiohistorian org WTMJ advertisement Broadcasting September 15 1952 page 17 Fifth Anniversary PDF Broadcasting September 1 1947 Retrieved 7 October 2014 Management P S amp Prestige Sells The Billboard 56 34 6 11 August 19 1944 Retrieved June 8 2021 via Google Books a b c Gordon Hinkley Wisconsin Broadcasting Museum 8 January 2014 Retrieved June 17 2021 Billboard Arbitron DJ rating performance Billboard Vol 91 no 14 April 7 1979 p 40 Retrieved June 17 2021 via Google Books Dudek Duane October 11 2011 Brewers WTMJ radio a winning combination Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on October 12 2011 Retrieved June 3 2021 Zahn Michael April 29 1990 WKTI catches WTMJ in race for top station The Milwaukee Journal p 17 Retrieved June 3 2021 via NewsBank 12 Summer 90 Arbitron Results PDF Radio amp Records 45 October 12 1990 Retrieved June 16 2021 a b Kening Dan November 9 1993 Meet Jay Marvin WLS late night left wing talk host Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on June 16 2021 Retrieved June 16 2021 a b Chandler Kurt July 2000 Charlie s bully pulpit Milwaukee Magazine Archived from the original on November 6 2016 Retrieved May 30 2021 a b Dudek Duane November 22 2013 After 86 years WTMJ AM to end Wisconsin Badgers broadcasts Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on December 2 2013 Retrieved June 3 2021 FCCdata org powered by REC WTMJ AM to become CBS affiliate Milwaukee Business Journal August 13 2001 Archived from the original on April 19 2003 Retrieved February 12 2022 Kissinger Meg February 9 2002 Radio hosts take center stage in recall drive Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on August 3 2002 Retrieved May 30 2021 Borowski Greg J Johnson Mike February 22 2002 Ament quits Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on September 14 2002 Retrieved May 30 2021 Dudek Duane March 19 2013 WTMJ AM plans to stay the course after firing program director Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on May 21 2013 Retrieved June 23 2021 Kirchen Rich December 2 2013 Wisconsin Badgers games move to AM 920 Oldies 95 7 Milwaukee Business Journal Archived from the original on December 7 2013 Retrieved June 3 2021 E W Scripps Journal Merging Broadcast Ops TVNewsCheck July 30 2014 Retrieved July 31 2014 Glauber Bill December 19 2016 Paul Ryan thanks Charlie Sykes for lifting conservative ideas Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved May 30 2021 Sykes Charles J December 15 2016 Charlie Sykes on Where the Right Went Wrong The New York Times Archived from the original on December 22 2016 Retrieved May 30 2021 Venta Lance 23 February 2018 WTMJ Launches FM Signal RadioInsight Retrieved 6 May 2018 Ellis Jon 25 July 2017 Broadcasting News July 2017 Northpine com Retrieved 6 May 2018 WTMJ s FM Expansion Plans Threatened By Translator Dispute 24 July 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2018 American Family Field Fan Guidelines Milwaukee Brewers Major League Baseball Retrieved 17 September 2022 Good Karma Pays Off For Craig Karmazin Radio amp Television Business Report 27 July 2018 Retrieved 2018 07 27 Morgan Murphy Media Invests In Good Karma Brands WTMJ WKTI Milwaukee Purchase All Access Retrieved 2018 09 28 Scripps Completes Two More Pieces Of Radio Division Sale Inside Radio November 2 2018 Retrieved November 2 2018 Nielsen Audio Ratings Archived from the original on 2021 06 01 Kirchen Rich Green Bay Packers switch Milwaukee radio home from WTMJ AM to iHeartMedia sports station Milwaukee Business Journal Retrieved October 27 2021 Spaulding Mike January 22 2022 Packers playoff run ends after one game fall to 49ers 13 10 620 WTMJ Retrieved January 23 2022 Albers Andrea 28 September 2022 WTMJ Radio leaving Capitol Drive location after 80 years WTMJ TV Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Schedule 620 WTMJ Retrieved June 3 2021 WTMJ Nights Wisconsin EAS Plan September 2015 Ratings Industry Directory and Program Supplier Guide PDF Vol 1 Special Supplement Radio amp Records 2005 p 103 External links editOfficial site WTMJ in the FCC AM station database WTMJ in Nielsen Audio s AM station database W277CV in the FCC FM station database W277CV at FCCdata org FCC History Cards for WTMJ covering 1922 1980 as WCAY WKAF WTMJ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WTMJ AM amp oldid 1200220146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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