WEST (1400 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Easton, Pennsylvania, and serving the Lehigh Valley. It airs a rhythmic contemporary format, simulcast with AM 1600 WHOL. Both stations are owned by Lee L'Heureux, Patrick Cerullo, and Andrea Cerullo, through licensee Major Keystone LLC. Studios and offices are on Colorado Street in Allentown.[2]

WEST
Broadcast areaLehigh Valley
Frequency1400 kHz
BrandingLoud 106.9/99.5
Programming
FormatRhythmic contemporary
Ownership
Owner
  • Lee L'Heureux, Patrick Cerullo, and Andrea Cerullo
  • (Major Keystone LLC)
WHOL
History
First air date
1923; 101 years ago (1923)
Former call signs
WDBC (1923–1926)
WFJC (1926–1935)
Call sign meaning
W EaSTon
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID36996
ClassC
Power1,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
40°40′23.0″N 75°12′30.0″W / 40.673056°N 75.208333°W / 40.673056; -75.208333
Translator(s)99.5 W258DV (Bethlehem)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Websiteloud995.com

WEST broadcasts with 1,000 watts. Its transmitter site is on St. John Street in Easton, near Interstate 78.[3] Programming is also heard on 90 watt FM translator W258DV at 99.5 MHz in Bethlehem.[4]

History

edit

20th century

edit

The station has traditionally traced its history to 1936, when it began broadcasting from Easton.[5] However, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) records list the station's first license date as June 2, 1923,[6] tracing its origin to the original license, issued as WDBC in Lancaster, Pennsylvania to Kirk Johnson & Co.[7] The WDBC call sign was randomly assigned from a sequential roster of available call letters. In early 1926, WDBC was briefly deleted,[8] but then relicensed a few months later, now as WKJC, again to Kirk Johnson & Co. at 16 West King Street in Lancaster.[9]

In late 1935, the call letters were changed to WEST, in anticipation for a move from Lancaster to Easton.[10] The station was locally owned and employed a general entertainment format evolving into a popular music format by the late 1940s. In 1948, WEST-FM signed on at 96.1 MHz. For decades, the FM station simulcast WEST's Middle Of The Road, Popular Music format. In 1973, the FM outlet became WLEV (now WCTO), and began an automated Soft Adult Contemporary format, featuring softer rock hits of the 1960s and 1970s, along with current music, known as "Hit Parade Music". WEST (AM) continued with a MOR format, blending artists like Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Peggy Lee, and others with some big bands and softer baby boomer pop sounds from the likes of Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Connie Francis, Neil Diamond, Tom Jones, The Carpenters, and others. Both WEST and WLEV were owned by Sound Media and then by Telemedia Group.

In the late 1970s, WEST dropped the adult contemporary and baby boomer pop songs, and switched to a Big Band and Standards format. In 1981 it went back to more of a Middle Of The Road format like that used in the mid-1970s, using a syndicated format called "Hitparade" that played half adult standards and half soft adult contemporary songs. In the late 1980s the station switched to a similarly formatted satellite service called "Stardust", which remained until 2001. Stardust leaned big bands and standards initially, but in the 1990s focused more on the soft AC and soft oldies artists mixed into the format. WEST had a local live morning and afternoon show as well as hours of specialty programs during the weekends, but the rest of the time used the Stardust format.

In 1995, the station was sold, along with WLEV, to Citadel Broadcasting, and the format remained Adult Standards. In 1997, Citadel acquired WFMZ FM, which by then had a format that was evolving to be musically closer to WLEV. In 1997, it was decided that there was no need for two AC stations in the Lehigh Valley, so they combined aspects of the AC formats from both stations and moved the WLEV call letters and format and some of the air staff to 100.7 that July.

WEST was sold to Maranatha Broadcasting, which previously owned 100.7 FM, in 1997. Maranatha also owned and still owns TV channel 69 WFMZ-TV, and WEST simulcast Channel 69's 5 p.m. newscast. It was thought that WEST might switch to a religious format but that did not happen, as the station continued its MOR format as well as many specialty programs.

21st century

edit

In 2001, when WKAP (now WSAN) dropped Westwood One's Standards format for Oldies, WEST switched to Westwood One's similar Standards format, which evolved to a slightly softer AC in 2002. The specialty shows and the Channel 69 newscasts remained. WEST was rumored to be switching to Oldies in 2006 when WKAP dropped oldies for religious programming, but that also never happened.

In 2007, Maranatha sold WEST to Matthew J. Braccili, who also owns WHOL. That April, WEST's intellectual unit was totally shut down, including the satellite standards format and the specialty shows, and WEST began simulcasting the Spanish language format aired over WHOL. In December, 2010, Matthew J. Braccili purchased FM translator W258BM (99.5 MHz) in Easton and began retransmitting WEST.

On October 11, 2019, Braccili sold WEST, WHOL, and three FM translators to Victor Martinez's Hispanic Broadcasting Radio for $1.35 million.

On December 21, 2020 at 12 p.m, WEST switched to a rhythmic contemporary format branded as "Loud 99.5". The station ran commercial-free until after New Year Day.[11] 16 days later, WHOL dropped its conservative talk format, again switching to a simulcast of on WEST, branded as "Loud 106.9/99.5".[12]

WEST, along with WHOL and FM translators W258DV and W295CR, was sold to Major Keystone LLC on January 17, 2022 in exchange for WGLD, WTKZ, and translator W296EA.[13] The swap was consummated on March 31, 2022.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WEST". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ LoudRadioPA.com/contest-rules
  3. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WEST
  4. ^ FCC.gov/W258DV
  5. ^ "Pennsylvania: Easton: WEST, Broadcasting Yearbook (1970 edition), page B-170.
  6. ^ "Date First Licensed", FCC History Cards
  7. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, July 2, 1923, page 3.
  8. ^ "Alterations and Corrections: Strike out all particulars", Radio Service Bulletin, February 27, 1926, page 7.
  9. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, July 31, 1926, page 3.
  10. ^ "C. List of Broadcasting Stations: (2) Changes to List", Radio Service Bulletin, November 15, 1935, page 12.
  11. ^ "Lehigh Valley Gets Loud With Hip Hop". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  12. ^ "Loud Radio Quickly Doubles Up In Allentown". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  13. ^ "Mega 107.1 Debuts In Lancaster/York Via Major Keystone Swap". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2022-01-17.
edit