WEMB

1420 WEMB
City Erwin, Tennessee
Broadcast area
Frequency 1420 kHz
First air date 1956
Power
  • 5,000 watts day
  • 21 watts night
Class D
Facility ID 70509
Transmitter coordinates 36°06′58″N 82°26′49″W / 36.11611°N 82.44694°W / 36.11611; -82.44694
Callsign meaning Name of founder's wife
Owner WEMB, Inc.

WEMB is a radio station which served the Tri-Cities region of Johnson City/Kingsport/Bristol in Tennessee and Bristol in Virginia. The outlet, owned by WEMB, Inc., was licensed to Erwin, Tennessee.

History

The call letters EMB stood for Elvia Meadows Blakemore,[1] wife of Max Blakemore, who built the station over his pharmacy, Clinchfield Drug on Main Avenue in Erwin. WEMB's first broadcast license was granted June 6, 1956.

Hostage situation

In June 1985, a gunman with two rifles held the station hostage for five hours. Lyle Shelton of Erwin interrupted a WEMB news broadcast in which WEMB news editor-in-chief Kathy Thornberry mentioned his recent arrest. Shelton told disc jockey Charles "Chuck" Ray he wanted to be put on the air. "He said he wanted to tell the truth," Ray told police. Broadcasting was shut down during the crisis. A SWAT Team from nearby Johnson City was brought in and ordered to surround the station. At the request of his wife, who spoke to him through a megaphone, Shelton walked out of the building and surrendered to police custody. No shots were fired.[2]

Ownership

The WEMB, Inc. trust was formed upon the 1994 death of WEMB's second owner, James True.[3] In True's will, he left ownership of the station to be managed by General Manager James Crawford, Production Manager Charles Ray, and Operations Manager Hilda White. True decided the trust was to manage station affairs, with benefits being dealt to True's three adult children, until his eldest daughter turned 50 years old.[4] True's daughter Maria D. True, having no experience in radio or broadcasting, disbanded the partnership and leased the 1420 AM bandwidth to NBC Sports Radio.

Headquarters

In 1966, the station moved offices and broadcasting headquarters to Riverview Road, just south of Erwin, due to severe flooding of the Nolichucky River.[5] In 2016, the WEMB, Inc. partnership was disbanded. Afterward, an application for license reinstatement was dismissed by the FCC.[6]

References

Coordinates: 36°06′58″N 82°26′49″W / 36.11611°N 82.44694°W / 36.11611; -82.44694

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