WBMQ

WBMQ (630 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Savannah, Georgia. It is owned by Cumulus Media and airs a news/talk format. The studios and offices are on Television Circle in Savannah.[1] The transmitter is off Dulany Avenue near the Savannah River.[2]

WBMQ
CitySavannah, Georgia
Broadcast areaSavannah metropolitan area
BrandingNews-Talk 630 WBMQ
Frequency630 kHz
First air dateDecember 29, 1939 (as 1310 WSAV)
FormatNews/Talk
Power4,800 watts (day)
47 watts (night)
ClassD
Facility ID54800
Former call signsWSAV (1939-1977)
WKBX (1977-1985)
Former frequencies1340 kHz (1941-1949)
1310 kHz (1939-1941)
AffiliationsWestwood One News
WSAV-TV
OwnerCumulus Media
(Cumulus Licensing LLC)
Sister stationsWEAS-FM, WIXV, WJCL-FM, WJLG
WebcastListen Live or
Listen Live via iHeart
WebsiteWBMQ.net

WBMQ's weekday schedule is made up of mostly syndicated conservative talk shows from the co-owned Westwood One Network. They include Michael Savage, Chris Plante, Mark Levin, Clark Howard, Phil Valentine, John Batchelor, Red Eye Radio and America in the Morning with John Trout. Most hours begin with Westwood One News. NBC-TV network affiliate WSAV-TV 3 supplies WBMQ with some local news and weather. (At one time, the two stations had been co-owned.)

History

Early years as WSAV

On December 29, 1939, the station first signed on as WSAV, with the call sign standing for "SAVannah."[3] It broadcast at 1310 kilocycles at a power of only 100 watts. Studios and offices were in the Liberty National Bank Building. After the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) took effect in 1941, the station moved to AM 1340. WSAV was an NBC Red Network affiliate, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the Golden Age of Radio.

In 1947, an FM station was added, 100.3 WSAV-FM. It mostly simulcast the AM station's programming, but management did not see much of a future for FM radio and was more interested in building a TV station. Because of this, WSAV-FM stopped broadcasting in the mid-1950s and the license was turned in.

Move to AM 630

In 1949, WSAV moved to AM 630, coupled with a big boost in power. WSAV began running at 5,000 watts around the clock, non-directional by day but using a directional antenna at night to protect other stations on the frequency.[4] WSAV used a three-tower antenna array on Oatland Island.

In 1956, WSAV put Savannah's second TV station on the air. WSAV had battled with rival radio station 900 WJIV for the last VHF TV license available in Savannah. (Channel 11 WTOC-TV had gone on the air two years earlier.) WSAV emerged the winner. Channel 3 WSAV-TV became an NBC-TV affiliate, since WSAV was an NBC Radio affiliate.

Sale to Beasley

In 1977, management decided to sell the radio station, while retaining the TV station. AM 630 WSAV was sold to Beasley Broadcasting.[5] Because two stations that were no longer co-owned could not share the same call letters, AM 630 became WKBX. Beasley teamed up the station with FM station 95.5 WSGF, which it also owned. (WSGF is now active rock WIXV.) WKBX's full service middle of the road format was continued for several years. But in 1981, the station switched to a Christian radio format. In 1983, WKBX began airing country music. It changed to WBMQ in 1985 and began playing oldies.

WBMQ and WSGF were bought by Radio Southeast in 1988.[6] Radio Southeast changed WBMQ's format to talk in 1990. The station featured local hosts and at night carried syndicated shows from NBC Talknet. World and national news was supplied by CBS Radio News.

Sale to Cumulus

In 1998, Cumulus Media bought WBMQ and its FM sister station, WIXV. Cumulus also acquired 93.1 WEAS-FM, 96.5 WJCL-FM, 900 WJLG and 102.1 WZAT, creating a six-station cluster. All of the stations were moved to studios on Television Circle in Savannah.

In the early 2010s, WBMQ gave up its transmitter site on Oatland Island. It moved to a new location in Savannah, near the Savannah River. But because it could now only use one non-directional tower, it had to reduce its output. Daytime power dropped slightly to 4,800 watts and nighttime power was rolled back significantly to 47 watts. While the daytime signal covers a large region of Coastal Georgia and South Carolina, the nighttime signal only serves Savannah and its adjacent communities.[7]

References

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