KWVE-FM

KWVE-FM
City San Clemente, California
Broadcast area San Diego, California
Greater Los Angeles
Inland Empire, California
Branding K-Wave
Slogan The Wave of Living Water (primary)
Your Station for Worship and the Word (secondary)
Frequency 107.9 MHz (also on HD Radio)
First air date 1971
Format Christian talk and music
ERP 530 watts
HAAT 1,156 meters (3,793 ft)
Class B
Facility ID 8410
Transmitter coordinates 33°42′40.00″N 117°31′55.00″W / 33.7111111°N 117.5319444°W / 33.7111111; -117.5319444
Callsign meaning K WaVE (station's moniker)
Owner Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa
Sister stations KGSV, KSDW, KWTH
Webcast Listen Live
Website kwve.com
A previous branding of the station as seen on a bumper sticker.

KWVE-FM (107.9 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to San Clemente, California, broadcasting to the Greater Los Angeles area and northern San Diego County. KWVE-FM airs Christian radio programming with an emphasis on Bible teaching and Christian music of the praise and worship genre. The station is owned by Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, with its transmitter atop Santiago Peak and studios in the church-owned Logos Building in Santa Ana, adjacent to the church campus.

Most of the teaching programs on the station are locally produced by Calvary Chapel pastors. The praise and worship music, as described on the station's website, is meant to "lead one into the worship of God without attracting too much attention to the music itself."[1] It also has two hours of Christian children's programming on Saturday mornings.[2]

History

Before Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa purchased the station in 1985, KWVE-FM was a secular commercial music station that received poor ratings, except in the evening drive slot when it played cutting-edge punk rock and new wave music which pulled high Arbitron ratings. In 1982, KWVE-FM sold the 7 p.m. to midnight timeslot to Calvary Chapel as well as Sundays from 5 a.m. to noon. That programming generated a lot of interest, and on April 15, 1985, Calvary Chapel bought the station. The church expanded the Christian programming to its current 24-hour format, but kept the KWVE call letters and K-Wave brand. KWVE-FM advertises itself as "The Wave of Living Water", in reference to its wave-themed moniker and to the New Testament phrase "living water", a term for salvation through Jesus Christ.

For most of its existence the station's call letters were simply KWVE, without the FM suffix. That changed in 2009 when Calvary Chapel purchased a defunct Christian AM radio station, KGDP in Oildale, California and renamed it KWVE (now KGSV), simulcasting the FM signal into the Bakersfield radio market. As a result, the original KWVE was legally renamed KWVE-FM.

KWVE-FM is sometimes confused with a similarly named secular smooth adult contemporary radio station in Los Angeles, KTWV (94.7 FM), known as "94.7 The Wave" and owned by Entercom. Then-owner Metromedia converted rock-formatted KMET to KTWV and "The Wave" on February 14, 1987, nearly two years after the launch of KWVE-FM's current format. Both stations emphasize their FM frequencies to distinguish themselves from each other, and during the 1990s KWVE-FM kept on hand in its broadcast booth KTWV's request line and business numbers as a courtesy to listeners mistakenly calling into the wrong station.

The K-Wave Radio Network

K-Wave operates two other feeds outside the Los Angeles area.

KSDW (88.9 FM) in San Diego, K245AI (96.9 FM), and KWTH (91.3 FM) in Barstow, California; KOMP-HD2, K251BS (98.1 FM) Las Vegas, and K287BE (105.3 FM) Mountain Pass.

Together they create continuous signal coverage from San Diego County, California, through Orange County, California and Los Angeles County, California to Las Vegas, Nevada along the Interstate 15 highway corridor.

The church acquired the three stations on August 11, 2011. These stations were previously owned and programmed by other ministries affiliated with the Calvary Chapel fellowship of churches. KWTH and K284AU were originally a part of the Living Proof Radio Network when they signed on the air in 2006, but later were affiliated with The KRTM Radio Network from October 27, 2010 until August 16, 2011. K295AJ originally broadcast at 106.9 FM as part of the Calvary Satellite Network for many years before signing off in June 2009. It returned to the air in November 2010 at 98.1 FM as a part of the KRTM Radio Network.

25th anniversary

On April 15 and 16, 2010, Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa celebrated the 25th anniversary of its purchase of KWVE-FM and the station's Christian talk and music format with two evening concerts in the church sanctuary. The concerts featured Love Song, a Christian rock band founded at Calvary Chapel and popular during the Jesus Movement of the early 1970s, and messages from senior pastor Chuck Smith.

Website attacked by hackers

Beginning on October 17, 2010 visitors to KWVE-FM's website began complaining on the station's Facebook fan page that they could not access either the home page or the Flash Player live stream. The station replied that the web server experienced a hacker attack and the entire site had to be taken down while they cleared the hardware of malignant code and rebuilt the site "from the ground up". As of November 1 the site and live stream were back in operation.[3]

Calvary Chapel Music Channel

On August 7, 2011 KWVE-FM announced on its website and Facebook page the creation of the Calvary Chapel Music Channel, a commercial-free iTunes channel streaming the station's music 24 hours a day.[4]

EAS issues

KWVE-FM is the Local Primary station of the Emergency Alert System (EAS) for Orange County, meaning that all radio stations and cable systems in the area must relay emergency information and Required Monthly Tests from KWVE-FM, when activated.

On September 15, 2009, the Federal Communications Commission fined Calvary Chapel $5,000 for a botched EAS test on October 19, 2008—on that date, the station conducted a Required Monthly Test (RMT) by mistake, instead of the scheduled Required Weekly Test. The operator aborted the test midway through, leading the station to fail to broadcast a code to indicate the end of the test, causing all stations and cable systems in the area to broadcast KWVE-FM's programming until those stations took their equipment offline or their EAS equipment had timed out (after two minutes).[5]

After the fine was levied, every state broadcast association in the United States submitted a joint letter to the FCC, protesting against the fine, saying that the FCC could have handled the matter better.[6] On November 13, 2009, the FCC rescinded its fine against KWVE-FM, but had still admonished the station for broadcasting an unauthorized RMT, as well as omitting the code to end the test.[7]

In September 2017, a glitch during a test conducted by KWVE caused the station to accidentally omit the end-of-message tone, which caused portions of Chuck Swindoll's Insight for Living program to accidentally be relayed to local cable providers. In the audio relayed, Swindoll was heard quoting a Biblical verse, 2 Timothy 3:1, and stating that "extremely violent times" would come, which led viewers to suggest that it had been hacked to inform of an impending apocalypse.[8][9][10]

References

  1. "KWVE About Us". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved 2006-04-19.
  2. "KWVE Programming". Archived from the original on 2006-02-18. Retrieved 2006-04-19.
  3. K-Wave Listener fan page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/KWVE107.9?ref=ts Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  4. "Calvary Chapel Music Channel" page at KWVE-FM website, http://cc-music-channel.kwve.com/ Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  5. FCC document: "In the Matter of Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa, Inc., FM Radio Station KWVE San Clemente, California: NOTICE OF APPARENT LIABILITY FOR FORFEITURE", Adopted: September 15, 2009 Released: September 17, 2009
  6. Radio Magazine: "State Broadcast Associations Appeal KWVE EAS Fine to FCC", October 9, 2009.
  7. Radio Magazine: "FCC Dismisses KWVE EAS Fine", November 17, 2009.
  8. "End-of-world prediction interrupts TV broadcasts in Orange County". Orange County Register. 2017-09-21. Retrieved 2017-09-30.
  9. "End-of-world message on TV was just glitch from a test of the Emergency Alert System". Orange County Register. 2017-09-23. Retrieved 2017-09-30.
  10. Bever, Lindsey (2017-09-22). "'Extremely violent times will come!': Ominous emergency alert was just a TV test gone awry". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2017-09-30.
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