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WBCN 1660 AM is a radio station licensed to serve Charlotte, North Carolina. The station is owned by Beasley Broadcast Group. It airs CBS Sports Radio. The studios are located on South Boulevard in Charlotte's South End and a transmitter is located in West Charlotte. WBCN is licensed to broadcast in HD on 1660 AM.〔http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_det.pl?Facility_id=87037〕 ==History== The station signed on in December 2003 as WFNA to help improve the signal range of Charlotte's original all-sports station, WFNZ, airing some of that station's programming.〔 〕 WFNZ must power down to 1,000 watts at night, rendering it all but unlistenable in some parts of the market. The station was assigned the call letters WBMX on July 29, 2009. It was assigned the WBCN call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on August 12, 2009.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/call_hist.pl?Facility_id=87037&Callsign=WBCN )〕 The assignment of the WBMX and WBCN call letters came as CBS Radio prepared for a radio station shuffle in Boston. WBCN, Boston's longtime rock station, was set to move to a digital-only platform, while WBMX was slated to move from 98.5 FM to WBCN's old position at 104.1 FM. This swap was being made to create a sports talk station at 98.5 FM. On August 5, 2009, Mix 98.5 in Boston switched its call letters from WBMX-FM to WBZ-FM, the call letters of the new sports station. The WBMX calls were parked at WFNA, while WBCN aired for its final days. Shortly after midnight on August 12, 2009, WBCN signed off, and the WBCN and WBMX call letters were switched to complete the process. According to ''The Charlotte Observer'', CBS decided to park the WBCN call letters in Charlotte to keep another Boston station from picking them up and trading on their 51-year heritage in Boston (including 41 years as a rock station). Bill Schoening, CBS Radio manager for Charlotte, said, "It's very common in the business. It was a major signal with call letters that still have value and heritage.”〔 〕 On September 14, 2009, WBCN became "America's Talk", a conservative-leaning talk radio station featuring syndicated hosts Michael Smerconish, Melanie Morgan, Jason Lewis, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, John Gibson and Phil Hendrie. The target audience was be primarily male and ages 25 to 54. Schoening said Air America was not considered since "I don't know if there's an audience." Operations manager D.J. Stout said, "We feel that Charlotte has never really had an alternative when it comes to news talk." Lewis, a former host at WBT, is currently based in Minneapolis and distributed by Premiere Radio Networks. He said, "I think it'll be the stiffest competition WBT has seen in a while." Local newscasts each hour were produced jointly with WCNC-TV.〔 Lewis moved back to WBT in 2011. On June 21, 2012, ''The Observer's'' Mark Washburn reported that WBCN would be one of the charter affiliates of CBS Sports Radio, and will carry that network's programming throughout the day starting on New Year's Day, 2013.〔Washburn, Mark. (Another sports radio station for Charlotte ). The Charlotte Observer, 2012-06-21.〕 WBCN began airing network programming on January 2, 2013. It also airs any Wake Forest or Davidson basketball games that conflict with Charlotte Hornets games on WFNZ.〔Washburn, Mark. (Charlotte scores another sports station ). The Charlotte Observer, 2012-12-27.〕 On October 2, 2014, CBS Radio announced that it would trade its entire Tampa and Charlotte stations (including WBCN), as well as WIP in Philadelphia to the Beasley Broadcast Group in exchange for 5 stations located in Miami and Philadelphia.〔(CBS And Beasley Swap Philadelphia/Miami For Charlotte/Tampa ) from Radio Insight (October 2, 2014)〕 The swap was completed on December 1, 2014. On September 8, 2015, WBCN changed back to conservative talk, branded as "America's Pulse 1660".〔(WBCN Flipping to Conservative Talk )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「WBCN (AM)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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