Girish Mahajan (Editor)

WRNN (AM)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Branding
  
ESPN Myrtle Beach

Power
  
1,000 watts unlimited

Facility ID
  
24775

City of license
  
Myrtle Beach

Owner
  
Digity, LLC

Affiliation
  
ESPN Radio

First air date
  
1965

Class
  
C

Frequency
  
1450 kHz

Format
  
Sports radio

Area
  
Myrtle Beach

WRNN (AM) wwwmyrtlebeachradiostationscomwpcontentimages

Broadcast area
  
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

Sister stations
  
WRNN-FM, WMYB, WYAV, WKZQ-FM

WRNN (1450 AM) is a Sports talk radio station licensed to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA, serving the Myrtle Beach area. The station is currently owned by Alpha Media, through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC.

Contents

A portion of WRNN's broadcast day was a simulcast of sister station WRNN-FM from 8 PM to 6 AM on weekdays, and throughout the weekend. WRNN previously aired Mike Gallagher, Dr. Laura, Clark Howard, Lars Larson, and a local sports talk program during the daytime and evening hours.

History

Ham radio operators started WTGR, a 250-watt station at 1520 AM, in 1965. Tiger Radio became "the hallmark radio station" for Myrtle Beach, playing Top 40 and beach music. DJs included Billy Smith, Bill Hennecy, Big Al Irvin, Bill Connell, Bruce Miller, Steve Mims and J. Patrick Milan.

WTGR began a simulcast of WKZQ-FM in the early 1980s and eventually became WKZQ.

Banana Jack Murphy and Bob Scarborough of Waccamaw Media started TigerRadioOnline.com, an Internet radio station, in 2000, with jingles and music from the former WTGR. This station stayed on the air until 2005, operating from Waccamaw Media studios on Wesley Street near what is now Freestyle Music Park.

On December 23, 1996, WKZQ moved to 1450, a frequency vacated in the mid-1980s which once used the letters WMYB, giving the station a nighttime signal (though daytime power was reduced from 5,000 to 1,000 watts), and continuing the FM simulcast, as well as NASCAR. At first, WKZQ played rock. Then it went to sports talk. The station also aired the Atlanta Braves. Tony Kornheiser replaced The Fabulous Sports Babe late in 1999. Also heard on the station at that time were three NFL games each Sunday, Monday Night Football, UNC Tar Heel football and basketball, some East Carolina University games, other Westwood One and CBS college football, and the Charlotte Hornets.

When NextMedia Group bought the station in 2000, the WJYR letters were moved from 92.1 FM, and most of the station's programming was adult standards from the Music of Your Life network. Since few people listened (other stations played similar music), sports talk returned. In 2002, the call letters changed to WQJM. ESPN Radio aired 24 hours a day prior to August 2002 but remained on the station in the overnight hours and on weekends until February 2003; and talk radio other than sports was part of the format. The station served as a "companion" to talk station WRNN-FM. Programming included the morning show hosted by Dave Priest and Tara Servatius. The AM station also aired The Clark Howard Show and Clemson University games other than ACC.

On April 25, 2013, WRNN split from its simulcast of the FM and changed their format to sports, with programming from ESPN Radio. Mike & Mike also aired on WKZQ-FM but was heard only on WRNN as of September 2014.

NextMedia sold WRNN and its 32 other radio stations to Digity, LLC for $85 million; the transaction was consummated on February 10, 2014. In 2014, Digity, LLC added the station's first local programming as the station became the new radio home for the Myrtle Beach Pelicans, with Nathan Barnett calling the games.

Effective February 25, 2016, Digity, LLC and its 124 radio stations were acquired by Alpha Media for $264 million.

History of WMYB 1450 AM

WMYB was the first radio station in Myrtle Beach in the early 1950s.

Tom Fowler, later vice president for radio with South Carolina Educational Television, made his debut on WMYB the night of the fire that killed three Apollo 1 astronauts. In 2002 he said, "The Teletypes went nuts. I thought we were at war. That was the real start of an adventure."

WMYB's format was adult contemporary during most of its later years, when it used the call letters WQOK and WCSE. The format was oldies in 1985. The letters WKEL were approved but never used, since the station signed off in the late 1980s.

References

WRNN (AM) Wikipedia


Similar Topics