WJAS

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WJAS
WJAS Logo-01.png
CityPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Broadcast areaPittsburgh metropolitan area
Frequency1320 kHz
BrandingTalk Radio 1320 and 99.1 WJAS
Programming
FormatTalk
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Westwood One
Fox News Radio
Ownership
OwnerSt. Barnabas Broadcasting, Inc.
OperatoriHeartMedia, Inc.
WBGG, WDVE, WKST, WPGB, WWSW, WXDX
History
First air date
August 4, 1922
Former call signs
WJAS (1922-1973)
WKPQ (1973)
WKTQ (1973-1981)
Technical information
Facility ID55705
ClassB
Power7,000 watts daytime
3,300 watts nighttime
99 watts (translator)
Translator(s)99.1 W256DE (Pittsburgh)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website1320WJAS.com

WJAS (1320 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, calling itself "The Talk of Pittsburgh." It is owned by St. Barnabas Broadcasting, a division of the Saint Barnabas Health System. It broadcasts a talk radio format, partially programmed by iHeartMedia under a master services agreement (with St. Barnabas retaining authority over personnel decisions),[1] with studios and offices on Fleet Street in Green Tree.

By day, WJAS is powered at 7,000 watts non-directional. To avoid interfering with other stations on 1320 AM, it reduces power at night to 3,300 watts and uses a directional antenna. The transmitter is located off Highland Drive in the Highland Park neighborhood of Pittsburgh.[2] Programming is also heard on 99 watt FM translator W256DE at 99.1 MHz.[3]

Programming[]

Weekdays begin with a morning drive time show hosted by David Blomquist ("Bloomdaddy"), a veteran Pittsburgh broadcaster. It is simulcast with WWVA (1170 AM) in Wheeling, West Virginia. Nationally syndicated conservative talk shows fill the rest of the schedule: Glenn Beck, Rose Somma Tennant, Sean Hannity, Dave Ramsey, Mark Levin, Coast to Coast AM with George Noory and This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal.

Weekends feature shows on money, health, car repair and technology. Weekend syndicated hosts include Joe Pags, Kim Komando and Bill Cunningham. Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming. Most hours begin with news from Fox News Radio.

WJAS is the home to University of Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball games as well as Duquesne Dukes football and men's basketball games.

History[]

Early years[]

WJAS, one of Pittsburgh's five original AM stations, first signed on the air on August 4, 1922. It became an NBC owned-and-operated station in 1957.[4] (after briefly operating as WAMP in the 1950s). WJAS carried NBC's dramas, comedies, news and sports during the last years of the Golden Age of Radio.

During the 1930s and 1940s, WJAS was home to the Wilkens Amateur Hour. Sponsored by Wilkens Jewelry Company, a 1942 review in the trade publication Billboard said the show "remains Pittsburgh's most popular local program."[5]

Top 40 era[]

In 1973, the station became popular with a new format as Top 40 WKPQ, later WKTQ, using the branding "13Q", under new owners Heftel Communications. A promotion was run where listeners would win prizes if they were randomly telephoned and answered with "I listen to the new sound of 13Q" (instead of "hello"). The Top 40 years were the highest-rated ever on 1320, ranking second in the Arbitron ratings to KDKA.

But as young listeners moved to FM for their music, the station's ratings began to fade. In 1977, Heftel sold the station to Nationwide Communications, which tried adult contemporary, which failed as well.

Adult standards[]

Nationwide sold the station to Beni Broadcasting, which switched the station to an adult standards format and brought back the WJAS call letters in 1981. Beni eventually sold WJAS to Renda Broadcasting. WJAS was one of the top standards stations in the United States. The format of Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole and Barbra Streisand continued for three decades.

WJAS boasted of two personalities with long and storied histories in Pittsburgh media: Jack Bogut and Bill "Chilly Billy" Cardille.

In August 2014, Renda Broadcasting sold WJAS to Pittsburgh Radio Partners LLC, a company controlled by Frank Iorio, Jr. The sale, at a price of $1 million, was consummated on August 1, 2014. It was Iorio's first radio station purchase in Pittsburgh, as his other stations were all based in Warren. Iorio put the Warren stations up for sale in 2017, finding a buyer in Lilly Broadcasting in 2019.

Talk radio[]

As expected, at noon on August 7, 2014, the new owner changed the station to a conservative talk format in response to rumors that WPGB would flip formats from talk to country music.[6] The final song under the standards format was "One More for the Road" by Frank Sinatra.

WJAS then began carrying most of the programs previously heard on WPGB (a station that directed its listeners to WJAS as it prepared to change formats). The first program to air on the talk-formatted WJAS was The Rush Limbaugh Show. WJAS did not choose to carry WPGB's signature morning drive program "Quinn and Rose", which returned to the Pittsburgh radio market on WBGG in 2018, but eventually hired Rose Somma-Tennent to replace Limbaugh in March 2021, a month after Limbaugh's death. Former Pittsburgh TV news anchor Wendy Bell hosted from 9 a.m. to noon from January to May 2021, before an unresolved and unspecified "personnel matter" prompted the ownership to pull Bell's show from the airwaves. Somma-Tennent was unexpectedly fired from the station in late June in favor of Dan Bongino.[7]

WJAS now runs a morning drive show hosted by David Blomquist ("Bloomdaddy"), which is produced at WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia.[8]

In November 2020, Iorio exited radio and sold the station and translator W256DE to St. Barnabas Health System for $2.05 million.[9] The sale was consummated on January 13, 2021.

References[]

  1. ^ "Wendy Bell off WJAS Schedule".
  2. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WJAS
  3. ^ Radio-Locator.com/W256DE
  4. ^ "NBC buys WJAS Pittsburgh." Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 12, 1957, pg. 9. [1][permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Frank, Mort (January 3, 1942). "Program Reviews: Wilkens Amateur Hour" (PDF). Billboard. p. 8. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  6. ^ "WJAS sale finalized; format expected to change" Pittsburgh Tribune-Review [2]
  7. ^ "Longtime Pittsburgh Talk Show Host off the Airwaves". 21 June 2021.
  8. ^ WJAS lineup - WJAS Radio
  9. ^ "WJAS/Pittsburgh Sold; Price for WFUN-F/St. Louis Spin-Off $8 Million".

External links[]

Coordinates: 40°28′46″N 79°54′12″W / 40.47944°N 79.90333°W / 40.47944; -79.90333

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