WWNN

WWNN
City Pompano Beach, Florida
Broadcast area Fort Lauderdale/Miami area
Branding WNN
Slogan The Health & Wealth Network
Frequency 1470 kHz
Translator(s) 95.3 MHz (W237BD)
Format Talk radio (brokered)
Power 50,000 watts day
2500 watts night
Class B
Facility ID 73930
Transmitter coordinates 26°10′46.00″N 80°13′15.00″W / 26.1794444°N 80.2208333°W / 26.1794444; -80.2208333
Callsign meaning W Winner's News Network
Owner Beasley Broadcast Group
(Beasley Media Group Licenses, LLC)
Sister stations WHSR, WSBR
Webcast Listen Live
Website wwnnradio.com

WWNN (1470 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a brokered talk radio format, whereby clients pay for airtime for long-form programming. Licensed to Pompano Beach, Florida, United States, the station serves the Fort Lauderdale area. Although the station's day power is fifty kilowatts, it is very directional away from Miami stations on 1450 and 1490. The station is owned by the Beasley Broadcast Group. Its studios are in Boca Raton and the transmitter is in Tamarac.

The Winner's News Network

WWNN began in 1987 on AM980 as a talk format station with a Top 40 format. Motivational speaker Joe Nuckols enticed motivational record company Nightingale/Conant to grant him permission to broadcast cuts from their motivation tape series and broadcast it in a format very much like Top 40 radio stations of the day. Placing them into certain segments every quarter-hour (general information, health/lifestyle, money, motivation), "Your Motivation Station" premiered in early 1987 with the intention of being a flagship radio station for a talk-format network called "The Winner's News Network."

After five years with this format, and the station enduring monetary losses, the station was sold to Howard Goldsmith, who had already experienced monetary success with the acquisition of WSBR in 1989.

Joe Nuckols continued working with Nightingale Conant to take the all motivation format to Los Angeles in partnership with John Douglas, a successful entrepreneur and broadcaster. The Los Angeles radio station, KYPA, became the flagship for a group of owned and operated stations including Chicago, Seattle, Dallas, and more. The format was syndicated by ABC Radio Networks until the group of stations was sold to Z Spanish Media.

The Goldsmith era

Goldsmith's apathy towards motivation programming was evident when he scrapped a majority of this programming during the broadcast day for the sake of clients from WSBR who did not feature programs along that station's business talk format. Those individuals were of the field of holisitics who had now found a home on a station where it was rechristened "Health and Motivation Radio" (motivation programming was relegated to those hours that weren't sold, or to the overnight hours, as an alternative to 'dead air').

AM 1470 history

From the 1950s until the 1990s, AM 1470 was the home of soul/R&B station WRBD with studios on Rock Island Road in Lauderhill. The call letters WRBD stood for "Rockin Big Daddy" and featured South Florida radio legends like Joe Fisher, "The Crown Prince" and "The Mad Hatter". In the 1950s and 1960s WRBD's, program director was Bob Gaynor who had been in Miami radio all over the AM dial reporting news since the 1950s. Bob Gaynor left radio to teach radio broadcasting at Miami-Lakes Tech. He retired after over 30 years of teaching and died in 2013

James Thomas ("James T") and Jerry Rushen were involved with WRBD in addition to their legendary 30-plus years at WEDR 99.1 in Miami and now its Cox Broadcasting sister station WHQT "Hot 105". James T was a DJ on WRBD early in his career.

AM 1470 WRBD was very popular soul music station with a signal that covered most of South Florida but broadcast only during daytime hours until the 1980s. During the mid-1970s many WRBD personalities also hosted night time soul music programs on 102.7 FM which was once a sister station to WRBD as WRBD-FM, then WCKO(FM).

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