WKZO (AM)

WKZO
City Kalamazoo, Michigan
Broadcast area (Daytime)
(Nighttime)
Branding Newsradio 590 and 106.9 FM WKZO
Slogan Everything Kalamazoo
Frequency 590 kHz
Translator(s) 106.9 MHz (W295CL)
First air date April 28, 1923 (first license granted)
Format News-Talk
Power 5,000 watts
Class B
Facility ID 54485
Callsign meaning W KalamaZOo
Former callsigns KFGZ (1923-1925)
WEMC (1925-1931)
Owner Duke E. Wright
(Midwest Communications, Inc.)
Sister stations WNWN, WNWN-FM, WQLR, WVFM, WZOX, WTOU
Webcast Listen Live
Website WKZO.com

WKZO-AM/FM (590 AM, 106.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Kalamazoo, Michigan broadcasting a news-talk format.

National syndicated programming includes Dave Ramsey, Mark Levin, Michael Savage and Coast to Coast AM. Michigan's Big Show with Michael Patrick Shiels airs during the late morning.

The station is also the southwest Michigan radio home of Michigan State Spartans football and men's basketball, Detroit Tigers baseball, Detroit Lions football, and Detroit Red Wings hockey.

Ken Lanphear hosts the morning show. Traffic and news updates are delivered by Tim Abramowski and Jeana Grondek respectively. Sports updates are provided by sister station WQLR-AM.

The station's news department files for other Michigan-based Midwest Communications stations, the Michigan News Network and CBS Radio. It consists of John McNeill and Jeana Grondek.

History

The station has been on the air as WKZO since 1931, but traces its roots back to 8AZ, an experimental station founded by John Fetzer in 1922 while he was a student at Emmanuel Christian College (now Andrews University) in Berrien Springs. The success of the experimental station, which was heard as far away as France, encouraged the college to look into starting a "real" radio station. The result was KFGZ, 'The Radio Lighthouse,' licensed in April 1923 and broadcasting at 1120 kHz with 500 watts of power. KFGZ's calls were changed in 1925 to WEMC. KFGZ/WEMC operated as a full-service radio station serving the St. Joseph Valley with community information and religious programming. The station was received across the eastern United States and into Canada, and a reception report once came in from a Dutch ship in the North Sea.

Despite the station's popularity, the fact that it operated non-commercially and the fact that the college was unwilling to allow the station to solicit financial donations from listeners ultimately sealed its fate, and by 1930, the college was looking to sell the station. Fetzer then purchased the station himself for $2,500. He essentially ran the station as a one-man job, serving as technician, engineer, disc jockey, and sales staff. When the Great Depression struck, Fetzer decided to move WEMC to Kalamazoo, which at the time was the largest city in Michigan that did not yet have its own radio station. The station began operations as WKZO in September 1931, and soon became a success.

Fetzer continued to own WKZO until his death in 1991, in later years operating it as a full-service MOR/adult contemporary music station and as a CBS Radio affiliate. Billboard magazine named WKZO Adult Contemporary Station of the Year in 1977, and the station was subsequently honored by the Michigan state legislature with a concurrent resolution of tribute.

Following the station's sale after Fetzer's death, WKZO converted to its present news/talk format in the early 1990s.

Andrews University would return to the broadcasting business in 1971, when the school signed on WAUS, a classical music station at 90.9 (later 90.7) on the FM dial.

WKZO's daytime signal provides at least secondary coverage of nearly all of west Michigan, as well as Lansing and South Bend. At night, it switches to a highly directional four-tower setup.

References

Coordinates: 42°20′55″N 85°33′48″W / 42.34861°N 85.56333°W / 42.34861; -85.56333

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