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Broadcast area | West Central Georgia, East Central Alabama |
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Frequency | 540kHz |
Branding | Newsradio 540 |
Programming | |
Format | News/talk |
Affiliations | Fox News Radio Compass Media Networks Premiere Networks Westwood One |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
WAGH,WGSY,WHTY,WSTH-FM,WVRK | |
History | |
First air date | 1940 |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 60764 |
Class | D |
Power |
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Transmitter coordinates | 32°25′58″N84°57′2″W / 32.43278°N 84.95056°W /32.43278; -84.95056 |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | newsradio540.iheart.com |
WDAK (540AM) is aradio station broadcasting anews/talk format.[2] Licensed toColumbus, Georgia, United States, the station serves the Columbus/Phenix City/Auburn area. The station is owned byiHeartMedia, Inc. (as iHM Licenses) and features programming fromWestwood One,Compass Media Networks,Fox News Radio andPremiere Networks.[3] It also broadcastsColumbus State University basketball and baseball games and Troy University sports events. Its studios are in Columbus, east of downtown, and its transmitter is southeast of downtown.
As540 AM is a Canadian and Mexicanclear-channel frequency, WDAK must reduce power during nighttime hours in order to protect theskywave signals of the dominantclass A stations on the frequency:CBK,CBT andXEWA.
The station began broadcasting in 1940 on a frequency of 1340kHz with a power of 250watts. Studios were located in the Martin Building in downtown Columbus. Co-ownedWDAK-TV began operation in 1953 on Channel 28. After the TV station was sold in 1958, WDAK was granted 5,000 watts by day, 500 watts by night on 540 kHz, with a new transmitter site and three towers located 5 miles west ofPhenix City, Alabama. In April 1967, WDAK moved to The Elms, anantebellum mansion at 1846 Buena Vista Road that was placed on theUS Department of the Interior lists of historical sites in 1972. During this entire period, WDAK was owned by the Woodall Family of Columbus, programmedTop 40, and was known as "Big Johnny Reb" or "The Giant of the Valley."[4] Signal and audience-wise, it was the dominant station in theChattahoochee Valley for decades. In the late 1970s, the station first switched tocountry music then to various other formats and under different owners. In the late 1990s, the station became "The Sports Monster" with mostly-satellite sports talk programming.
WDAK was top 40 in the 60's, one of several in a chain of stations owned by Woodall Broadcasting Co. All of their stations called themselves "Big Johnny Reb Radio". Station logo included a rebel flag and caricature of a Confederate soldier.
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