WZGM

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WZGM
WZGM BIZ RADIO1350 logo.png
CityBlack Mountain, North Carolina
Broadcast areaAsheville, North Carolina
Frequency1350 kHz
BrandingBiz Radio 1350
Programming
FormatBusiness Talk Radio
AffiliationsBusiness Talk Radio / Radio America
Ownership
OwnerHRN Broadcasting, Inc.
History
Former call signs
WAVJ (1990-1993)
WZQR (1993-1997)
WTZK (1997-2002)
WWRN (2002-2004)
WZNN (2004-2006)
Technical information
Facility ID40654
ClassD
Power10,000 watts day
56 watts night
Translator(s)96.1 MHz W241DD (Asheville)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitehttps://bizradioasheville.wordpress.com/

WZGM (1350 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a business talk radio format programming. WZGM is licensed to Black Mountain, North Carolina, United States.

History[]

Call letters used by this station have included WBMS and WAVJ.[1] WWRN was the first sports talk station in Asheville.[2] WWRN was purchased in August 2004 by Rick and Beth Howerton under their 'Zybek Media Group' moniker and they changed the call letters to WZNN. The new all-talk station was now known as "Super Talk 1350" after a daytime signal boost to 10,000 watts, and aired Neal Boortz, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, Michael Reagan, Mike Gallagher and Laura Ingraham.[3] The station switched to sports early in 2006 [4] and to oldies in 2007. The switch to the Southern Gospel format came late in 2008.

As of March 19, 2012 WZGM was being operated under a lease contract by News Talk 50, Inc., owned by Matt Mittan. The transitional programming at that time was: News Hour (11:00am–12:00pm), Dennis Miller (syndicated, 12:00pm–3:00pm), Take A Stand (Mittan's own program originated at WZGM and was syndicated across the state of NC, Jason Lewis (syndicated, 6:00pm–9:00pm), Neal Boortz (syndicated) airs 9:00pm–12:00am, Overnight with Jon Grayson (syndicated, 1:00am–6:00am). On April 15, 2012 the station launched a new logo along with a new slogan, "AM 1350 WZGM - Your Independent Talk Alternative". As of now, the station has strong community content, in the form of grass roots driven shows. Since the start of April 2012. The transition of the station has made a lot of press in the region and even some coverage on industry publications such as Talkers Magazine. In 2014, the format of the station moved away from political talk and focused solely on community talk and sports programming, with religious programming on Sunday mornings. Matt Mittan relaunched a new afternoon program at the end of 2014 called "Right Now! with Matt Mittan". It currently airs Live Mon-Thur 4-6pm on WZGM.

On February 2, 2015, Lanny Ford, general manager of WZGV in Charlotte, North Carolina since that station started, and former Carolina Panthers general manager Marty Hurney announced they were leasing WZGV and WZGM from HRN. Hurney, also an NFL Insiders analyst, had worked for WZGV since June 2014. Ford also said some WZGV programs would air on WZGM, which has added some sports-related programs and also broadcasts Appalachian State University sports.[5]

Matt Mittan, as well as numerous local community hosts, continue to broadcast on the station daily under Mittan's company, NewsTalk 50, Inc, providing local and regional discussions covering the goings on across western North Carolina. NewsTalk 50, Inc has grown to produce and distribute digital and radio programming for AM and FM stations across the state of NC as well, not just on WZGM.

As of July 3, 2015, Independent Asheville Radio went dark. The station currently airs syndicated and live local business talk programming.

On September 21, 2020, The King's Radio Network proudly welcomed WZGM as a 'sister station' in the company's religious format radio stations.[6]

[]

Independent Asheville Radio

(WZGM's logo under previous talk format)

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.apartmentsusa.com/northcarolina/nc-radio.htm, Retrieved 2007/05/03.
  2. ^ "Correction", Asheville Citizen-Times, February 11, 2004/
  3. ^ Tony Kiss, "New station features national, local talk shows", Asheville Citizen-Times, October 11, 2004.
  4. ^ Tony Kiss, "Take 5 Today", Asheville Citizen-Times, January 23, 2006.
  5. ^ Washburn, Mark (2015-02-05). "Hurney takes stake in running ESPN 730 radio". The Charlotte Observer.
  6. ^ https://www.wkjv.com/our-history

External links[]


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