Frequency 680 kHz | Branding 680 CJOB First air date March 11, 1946 | |
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Format News • Talk • Information |
CJOB is a talk radio station located at 680 kHz on the AM band in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It is owned and operated by Corus Radio, a national media company in Canada. CJOB had been the highest-rated radio station in Winnipeg for many years until it was overtaken in 2015 by competing talk radio station CBC Radio 990. CJOB and its sister stations, 99.1 Fresh Radio and Power 97, all currently operate out of the same location at 1440 Jack Blick Avenue at Polo Park, Winnipeg.
Contents
History
Programming
The majority of CJOB programming originates locally. CJOB is Winnipeg's news and information leader with a heavy emphasis on breaking news, traffic and weather. After many years hosting a national broadcast, Charles Adler has returned to the prime morning timeslot of 09:00. The station also broadcasts Winnipeg Blue Bombers games, and also aired Manitoba Moose games before the team moved to St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. CJOB, which had been the flagship station for the WHA/NHL incarnation of the Winnipeg Jets, bid for broadcast rights to the current NHL Jets, but lost out to CFRW. On Mondays at 07:00 during the Canadian Football League season, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach takes questions from Sports Director and voice of the Blue Bombers Bob Irving. Richard Cloutier and Kathy Kennedy host Winnipeg's Morning News, and Kennedy also hosts CJOB News At Noon. Dahlia Kurtz has entertaining guests from 13:00 to 15:00, followed by the All News Drive. Jim Toth hosts the CJOB Sports Show. Geoff Currier hosts the NightHawk weekday evenings between 20:00 and 23:00. CJOB also serves as the radio home of the Manitoba Bisons university football team.
Other personalities previously associated with the station include John Harvard, Peter Warren, Dick Vincent, Jack Wells and John Wells.
Up until 1959 CJOB broadcast the current hit parade music including rock and roll, but generally avoiding negro recordings like the Coasters and Platters. After 1959 the station changed its format to pop music only, in a negative reaction to R&R songs like Conway Twitty's Danny Boy. This music format continued until it changed to all talk in the 1980s.
Rebroadcasters
CJOB also has rebroadcasters in the following communities: