WDGY

WDGY
City Hudson, Wisconsin
Broadcast area Minneapolis-St. Paul
Branding 74 WDGY
Slogan The Original Rock and Roll Station
Frequency 740 kHz C-QUAM AM stereo
Translator(s) 92.1 W221BS (St. Paul)
103.7 W279DD (Hudson)
Repeater(s) 107.1-2 KTMY-HD2
First air date December 14, 1983 (as WRPX)
Format Classic Hits/Oldies
Power 5,000 watts (Daytimer)
Class D
Facility ID 6440
Callsign meaning Dr. George Young (original owner)
Former callsigns WAOZ (1982-1983, CP)
WRPX (1983-1993)
WMIN (1993-2008)
Owner Borgen Broadcasting
Webcast Listen Live
Website wdgyradio.com

WDGY (740 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Hudson, Wisconsin, and serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul radio market. It is owned by Borgen Broadcasting and airs a Classic Hits/Oldies radio format. The station's studios and offices are in Lakeland, Minnesota. The transmitter is off Commerce Drive, near Interstate 94 in Hudson.[1]

Because AM 740 is a Canadian clear channel frequency, WDGY is a daytime-only station. It must sign-off as sunset to avoid interfering with Class A CFZM in Toronto. WDGY can be heard around the clock on two FM translator stations: 92.1 W221BS in St. Paul and 103.7 W279DD in Hudson.[2] The station can also be heard on 107.1 KTMY's HD-2 channel in the Twin Cities.[3]

History

The original WDGY

WDGY was founded in 1923 by Dr. George Young, an optometrist who dabbled in radio as a hobby. It was one of the first commercial radio stations in the Twin Cities area. The original call sign was KFMT, broadcasting at 1300 kHz. The following year, the station moved to 1140 kHz. After several call letter changes, including WHAT and WGWY, Young settled on WDGY, which was based on his initials. The WDGY call letters remained on the station from 1925 until 1991, first at 1140 kHz, then to its longtime home at 1130 kHz in 1941. Following his death in 1945, Young's estate sold the station.

The station went through several ownership changes until 1956, when it were purchased by Todd Storz' Mid-Continent Broadcasting, an Omaha-based owner of a five-to-seven-station group (the maximum number allowed in those days). Storz quickly changed the format to Top 40, taking advantage of the early rise of rock and roll music. The station was nicknamed "WeeGee," and dominated the local ratings for several years.

In 1959, WDGY gained a formidable challenger when 630 KDWB arrived on the scene. KDWB's introduced itself to the Twin Cities radio market by way of a teaser ad campaign in newspapers and on other Twin Cities radio stations as "Formula 63" (for AM 630). WDGY and KDWB seesawed back and forth in ratings supremacy for area teen and young adult audiences throughout the raucous 1960s and 70s. The competition, sometimes friendly, sometimes not, resulted in some of the best merchandising promotions and concerts ever sponsored by local radio stations.

Generally, WDGY came in a regular second in overall audience ratings to market-dominant, clear-channel AM 830 WCCO. WDGY seemed to appeal to 18- to 35-year-old listeners while KDWB held a fair share of the teen audiences - considered hot properties during this period.

WDGY's longtime Top 40 format came to an end in 1977 when, faced with much stronger competition on the FM dial, it adopted a country music format, which continued well into the 1980s, prior to a flip to a news/talk format and finally, the adoption of sports talk as KFAN in 1991. Ironically, the abandoned WDGY call letters were quickly picked up by the former rival station at 630 kHz.

History of 740 AM

The original call sign for the station's construction permit was WAOZ, but the station was never on the air with those call letters. AM 740 began broadcasting as WRPX, featuring a locally based MOR/adult contemporary format targeting the Hudson/St. Croix Valley area, on December 14, 1983.

After a brief shutdown in 1993, due to business failure and a sale of WRPX to new owners, the station later picked up the vacated WMIN call sign, which had a long history in the market. WMIN aired a pop music Spanish-language format as "La Nueva Ley" until November 14, 2005. It also aired sports talk at various times as well as leasing time to two groups that eventually purchased their own full-time frequencies: "Straight Talk Radio" (later on 950 KTNF) and "Relevant Radio" (later on 1330 WLOL).

In 2008, the station became WDGY after sister station 630 AM switched to Regional Mexican music, using the call letters WREY.

The WMIN call sign was used from 1936 until 1972 by the predecessor to today's 1400 KMNV, and the call sign was also briefly used for a shared-time television station on channel 11.

The WMIN calls are now on a station northwest of the Twin Cities in Sauk Rapids. The station is known as "Uptown 1010", and broadcasts an Adult Standards format. It is owned and operated by Tri-County Broadcasting.

WDGY at one time carried "The True Oldies Channel" programmed by New York City DJ Scott Shannon. It now programs its oldies format in house.

In May 2016 WDGY began simulcasting on FM translator W279DD 103.7 FM in Hudson, Wisconsin. In February 2017 WDGY added another FM translator, W221BS 92.1 FM, broadcasting from an antenna atop Wells Fargo Place in Downtown St. Paul.[4]

On March 7, 2017 WDGY dropped HD and began broadcasting in C-QUAM AM stereo.

References

Coordinates: 44°58′05″N 92°40′01″W / 44.96806°N 92.66694°W / 44.96806; -92.66694

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.