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KDWB-FM

Coordinates: 45°03′30″N 93°07′28″W / 45.058306°N 93.124389°W / 45.058306; -93.124389
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(Redirected from WRAH)

KDWB-FM
Broadcast areaMinneapolis–Saint Paul
Frequency101.3 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding101.3 KDWB
Programming
FormatTop 40 (CHR)
SubchannelsHD2: Top 40/Dance "Pride Radio"
HD3: Variety hits "State Fair Radio"
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
August 1959 (65 years ago) (1959-08) (as WPBC-FM)
Former call signs
WPBC-FM (1959–1972)
WRAH (1972–1974)
WYOO-FM (1974–1976)
Call sign meaning
disambiguation of former Los Angeles sister station KFWB
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID41967
ClassC0
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT315 meters (1,033 ft)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
HD3: Listen Live
Websitekdwb.iheart.com

KDWB-FM (101.3 MHz) is an American commercial radio station broadcasting in the Twin Cities region of Minnesota, licensed to suburban Richfield. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, and airs a Top 40/CHR radio format.

KDWB has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000 watts. KDWB's transmitter broadcasts from the KMSP tower in Shoreview.

KDWB has an auxiliary transmitter with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 32,540 watts located at the IDS Center in Downtown Minneapolis. Studios are located in St. Louis Park.

History

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Between its AM and FM frequencies, KDWB has been an uninterrupted Top 40 outlet since 1959. Originally starting out at 630 kHz, the station's owners (Doubleday Broadcasting of Garden City, New York) purchased the 101.3 MHz frequency in 1976, later transferring the entire format there.

63 KDWB

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KDWB's origins date back to 1951 on the AM dial at 1590 kHz. The station was launched in August 1951, licensed to South St. Paul by the Tedesco brothers, Al, Vic and Nick,[2] as WCOW. On the air between dawn and dusk, the station played country western and old-time music and signed on each day with a cowbell. The offices and studios were located at 208 Third Avenue N., and the transmitter was located at 158 White Bear Avenue in North St. Paul.[3] The Tedesco brothers had attempted to get into television the previous year, on channel 17, but financial backing fell through. (The channel 17 allocation was granted to Twin Cities Public Television in 1965.)

WCOW was not successful, so the station transitioned to a female-oriented format, with the call letters changing to WISK in May 1956,[4] and switched its frequency to 630 kHz the next year. Once more, the format proved unpopular, and the station was sold the following year to the Crowell-Collier Broadcasting Company, owners of KFWB in Los Angeles and KEWB in San Francisco. The top 40 format of those stations, with strong California/West Coast style influence, was brought to Minnesota, and the call letters changed to KDWB in September 1959.[5] "Channel 63, KDWB" then began its long uninterrupted run as a pop music station, and quickly became a major competitor to the established WDGY, which had been playing a pop music format for three years by that point. KDWB and WDGY were fierce rivals throughout the 1960s and 1970s; during that time, both stations gained more competition, as "Request Radio" AM 950 and FM 104.1 KRSI (1968), KSTP (1972), and WYOO (1974) picked up the format.

As KDWB, the station became the first radio station to be fined by the Federal Communications Commission. In March 1961, six months after a review of the Communications Act of 1934 granted it such power, the agency assessed a $10,000 penalty to the station for repeated willful violations of nighttime broadcast power restrictions on the AM band.[6]

On-air staff and other programming

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During the 1960s and 1970s, Program Director Chuck Blore referred to the seven air shifts in 24 hours as "The 7 Swinging Gentlemen". They included:

Other notable On Air Staff included:[7][8][9]

  • Ron Block
  • Charles Brown
  • Barry McKenna
  • Jonny Matthews
  • Adam North
  • Chris Roberts
  • Jackson Ross
  • Rob Sherwood
  • Earl Trout

Syndicated and/or non-local originating broadcasts included American Top 40 with Casey Kasem, which aired Sunday evenings, and for over ten years, it was the highest-rated program in the Twin Cities market.[citation needed] Additional syndicated programming included "Jim Ladd's Innerview."

Program Directors included Chuck Blore and Bob Shannon.

On April 18, 1994, after 36 years, the 630 kHz frequency went dark. The owner, Midcontinent Media, sold the studio and tower site, which by then had been at Radio Drive and Interstate 94 for many years, for development. The regional headquarters of State Farm Insurance was built in its place.

History of 101.3 FM

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101.3 FM began broadcasting on July 18, 1960,[10] as WPBC-FM, simulcasting daytime-only WPBC (980 AM) and broadcasting at night.[11] Four years later, owners Bill and Becky Ann Stewart received approval to move both stations from Minneapolis to Richfield, including an increase of the AM's power to 5 kW.[12] In 1969, the stations separated their programming, with the FM retaining the "good music" format, and the AM adopting a middle-of-the-road ("MOR") format.[13] The studios, transmitters (both AM and FM), towers and offices were located at the intersection of Cliff Road and Cedar Avenue (presently "Nichols Road"), in Eagan.

The Stewarts sold WPBC-AM-FM in 1972, citing increased competition from larger companies, to Fairchild Industries for $1.5 million. Fairchild subsequently dismissed the staff and overhauled both stations. On November 3, 1972, WPBC became WYOO, airing an oldies format, while WPBC-FM went off the air for technical adjustments, to emerge as album-oriented rock station WRAH[14] on January 23, 1973.[15]

After making its debut to middling ratings that continually declined, WYOO pivoted in April 1974, spearheaded by new general manager Mike Sigelman, the former sales manager of KDWB.[16] A shift to adult contemporary was met with even lower ratings; with management seeing a gap for an FM Top 40 station, both stations flipped[17] on August 26, 1974, while broadcasting from the Minnesota State Fair.[18] The market's fourth Top 40 at the time, originally intended to be "Y100" until WHYI Miami sent a cease and desist letter, quickly became a competitive station in the market.

U100 enjoyed a colorful but short life. The AM dial in the Twin Cities was packed with Top 40 stations, with U100, KDWB, WDGY and KSTP all fighting for the same audience. AM music stations also desired to transition to the increasingly popular FM dial. In early 1976, Fairchild Industries placed both stations on the market. Entertainment Communications, Inc., the owner of easy listening station WAYL (93.7 FM), was interested in the AM station to simulcast WAYL's signal, but it could not buy a second FM station in the market under the rules of the time. This meant that Fairchild needed to find a buyer for the FM station; the company contacted owners of standalone AM stations in the area. Doubleday Broadcasting, owner of KDWB, was not actively seeking an FM station at the time, but offered to buy WYOO-FM in February 1976 after it was presented with a generous deal that included the FM station and the building in Eagan that housed both stations for $850,000.[19] KDWB's general manager at the time, Gary Stevens, said that it did not buy WYOO-FM to shut down a competitor, but rather to take advantage of what it saw as a good deal.[18] The AM station was then sold to WAYL for $625,000.[20]

"U100" ended at midnight on September 16, 1976,[21] and under KDWB PD John Sebastian, KDWB morning personality Dave Thomson launched the KDWB AM/FM simulcast the following morning at 6:00 with "Bad Blood" by Neil Sedaka as the first song played following a pre-recorded announcement introducing the change from U100. Full-time AM/FM simulcasts on stations licensed to large cities (cities with populations over 100,000) had not been allowed by the FCC since 1965. However, KDWB's simulcast was permitted via a conditional waiver and a technicality: while the AM was licensed to St. Paul (a community of over 100,000), the FM's city of license, Richfield, had a substantially smaller population. The FCC deemed the request to be in the public interest; however, KDWB was required by the FCC to broadcast eight hours of separate FM non-simulcast public affairs programming per week, with a portion focused on Richfield. The public affairs programs were broadcast from the former WYOO studio B news room and master control board in Eagan.

Boosted by the FM stereo simulcast and the removal of one of its competitors, KDWB quickly regained its position as the dominant Top 40 station in the Twin Cities. After a brief stint with a CHR/album rock hybrid as "Y-11", WDGY switched to a country format on September 2, 1977. KSTP began to lean Adult Top 40 during the late 1970s and evolved into a talk station by the early 1980s (as its music focus shifted to FM sister, KS95). By the end of the decade, KDWB was the only Top 40 station in the Twin Cities.

Stereo 101

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Stereo 101 FM billboard in 1982

With the active competition gone, KDWB-FM split apart from the AM station's Top 40 simulcast in September 1979, and became a pop/rock hybrid as "K101 FM", with a new separate air-staff. K101 FM was met with mixed reviews and less than hoped for ratings in the Fall 1979 Arbitron ratings. KDWB management opted for a change between the last week of December 1979 and New Year's 1980, by replacing the Program Director. The station immediately morphed into "Stereo 101, The Twin Cities Rockin' Best", then "KDWB Twin Cities' 101, The Home Of Rock 'N' Roll", and then "Real Rock 101 KDWB", an album rock station designed to go up against KQ92, which had recently dumped its freeform rock presentation and adopted a stricter playlist in reaction to a drop in ratings. Stereo 101 would be successful in its four-year run, topping KQRS in the Arbitron ratings many times, but KQRS would endure and prevail. By the summer 1983, KDWB-FM began to move from album rock to a pop/rock hybrid again, and eventually evolved into CHR the following year. KDWB's AM signal continued with the Top 40 format during this time, although it softened to adult contemporary in 1984.

Back to Top 40

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In December 1981, a serious new Top 40 competitor arrived in the Twin Cities, when WLOL dropped its soft rock format and turned itself into a high-profile hit music station (heavy with power pop and new wave), immediately shooting to the top of the ratings. At the other end of the spectrum, KS95 gravitated toward Adult Top 40. Around this time, WCCO-FM also briefly switched to Top 40. Meanwhile, 63 KDWB faded quickly in the ratings, as AM music stations were slowly becoming a thing of the past. To protect its heritage, take a chunk of WLOL's stellar ratings, and finally make the move of its legendary station to the FM dial, in early 1984, KDWB-FM reverted to the Top 40 simulcast as "The New KDWB FM 101", and then as "All Hit 101". Even though the AM station was running its own programming at times, in a role reversal, the FM signal was now deemed the priority, as 630 AM attained secondary status. The AM station aired a CHR format identical to its FM counterpart from fall 1984 to spring 1986, before it flipped to a separate satellite delivered Oldies format as "K63" in May 1986. In August 1991, 630 AM took on the WDGY call letters of their former Top 40 rival on 1130 AM.

KDWB-FM struggled for years against upstart market leader WLOL, which featured a fresher music selection, more popular DJs, and a highly rated morning show. KDWB was viewed by many as stuffy, stale, boring and misguided, and it went through several unsuccessful morning shows. It was argued by many that its promotions, music selection and on-air presentation paled in comparison to WLOL.

In 1988, newly hired program director Brian Phillips cleaned house, as he dismissed many of the on-air personalities, overhauled the music and brought in Steve Cochran to host The KDWB Morning Zoo. He also hired a new air staff, introduced 12-song commercial-free music sweeps, changed the overall on-air presentation, and created a new logo, which is still in use today. As the rechristened "101.3 KDWB", its fortunes changed, with KDWB quickly becoming the dominant Top 40/CHR station in the market. Now, WLOL was playing catch-up, as it tried various minor overhauls and tweaks before moving in a Rhythmic-oriented direction in 1990.[22]

KDWB also gained national attention in 1989 for helping to break "The Look" by Roxette, the first of four U.S. number-one songs for the Swedish duo. In February 1991, WLOL came to a sudden and premature end, as owner Emmis Broadcasting experienced financial problems and began to divest of many of its properties. Minnesota Public Radio purchased WLOL and turned it into the flagship for their classical music service. Throughout the rest of the 1990s, KDWB had virtually no CHR competition.

In 2000, KDWB got a new rival of sorts when upstart KTTB ("B96") went on the air with a rhythmic Top 40 format, heavy with hip-hop and urban contemporary music. While B96 was not the threat of a major rating, partly due to its rimshot broadcast signal and smaller promotional presence, it did give KDWB the most formidable competition it had in recent years. Later, the competition for the rhythmic/urban audience came from KZGO, sister station to the former B96.

At the other end of the spectrum, KS95 also competes somewhat with its older-leaning Hot AC format (which has since transitioned to a younger-leaning direction), as does KDWB's own sister station KTCZ, with its own pop/rock-leaning Hot AC presentation. In 2010, KTTB rebranded as KHTC (now KMWA), leaning more towards KDWB's format, and relocated their transmitter to the heart of the metro area. The battle between KDWB and KHTC lasted until New Year's Day 2012, when KHTC flipped to Modern AC to fill the void left open by WLTE's flip to Country, thus leaving KDWB as the market's only mainstream Top 40 outlet again.

HD Radio

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On April 25, 2006, Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia), announced that KDWB's HD2 subchannel will carry a format focusing on dance hits. The HD2 signed the following July as the Party Zone. "Party Zone" is also the name of the Friday and Saturday night show on KDWB simulcasted from local clubs that in the past has been hosted by the likes of Tone E. Fly, Gerry Dixon and Michael Knight. After six months of running jockless, the subchannel began to add announcers (from KDWB) to its programming.

In 2010, the Party Zone format began broadcasting on K273BH, its FM translator at 102.5, which covers the area. They were one of two outlets in the Clear Channel roster that did not use the Club Phusion Dance format, as this one featured a live presentation over the air. The other one is KXJM Portland, Oregon, who launched "Too Wild HD2" in January 2012, customized for that market.[citation needed]

On April 29, 2013, the Party Zone format was dropped in favor of an Adult Contemporary format. In e-mails exchanged with the KDWB programming director, it was discovered that ultimately the station will air "songs recorded in Studio C from Cities 97", which began on July 15, 2013. K273BH was flipped to relay KTCZ-HD2.

In 2017, KDWB-HD2 changed to iHeart's "Trancid" format.

In May 2018, the station activated an HD3 sub-channel, and began airing an adult hits format as "Minnesota State Fair Radio".

After KQQL-HD3/K244FE dropped the "Pride Radio" format and flipped to sports talk as "KFAN Plus" in August 2018, the "Pride Radio" format moved to KDWB-HD2.

On November 16, 2018, KDWB-HD3 briefly switched to KQQL's classic hits format (while KQQL made its annual flip to Christmas music that same day). However, on November 30, KDWB-HD3 switched to a country format branded as "The Bull 101.3-HD3." Gregg Swedberg, program director and operations manager of sister KEEY, says that the "Bull" format "just plays country music, with no pop crossovers".[23][24]

In May 2019, KDWB-HD3 reverted to its previous "Minnesota State Fair Radio" branding and Country/Adult Hits format.

Dave Ryan in the Morning

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The Dave Ryan in the Morning show has been KDWB's morning show since June 11, 1993. Ryan's co-hosts are Jenny Luttenberger, Bailey Hess and Vont Leak.[25]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KDWB-FM". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/183409743/?terms=wcow&match=1 [bare URL]
  3. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/183409743/?terms=wcow&match=1 [bare URL]
  4. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/187733333/?terms=wisk%20%2B%20wcow&match=1 [bare URL]
  5. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/184366760/?terms=kdwb&match=1 [bare URL]
  6. ^ "FCC throws the book at KDWB: $10,000 fine for power-antenna flub is first test of new law" (PDF). Broadcasting. March 27, 1961. p. 46. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
  7. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/181507934/?terms=%22rob%20sherwood%22&match=1 [bare URL]
  8. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/184923855/?terms=%22rob%20sherwood%22&match=1 [bare URL]
  9. ^ https://startribune.newspapers.com/image/186137978/?terms=%22kdwb%22&match=1 [bare URL]
  10. ^ Jones, Will (July 18, 1960). "More FM on the Way". Minneapolis Morning Tribune. p. 34.
  11. ^ "A new FM radio station..." The Minneapolis Star. July 14, 1960. p. 13B. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  12. ^ FCC History Cards for KDWB-FM
  13. ^ "WPBC Adult Radio Expands Programming Services". The Minneapolis Tribune. August 29, 1969. p. 19. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  14. ^ "'Scrapbook' shut by 'Golden Oldies' for WPBC radio". Minneapolis Tribune. November 4, 1972. pp. 1A, 7A. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  15. ^ Powers, Forrest (January 19, 1973). "WRAH May Start With Hum". The Minneapolis Star. p. 23A. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  16. ^ Letofsky, Irv (April 10, 1974). "WYOO to make nostalgia craze only a memory". Minneapolis Tribune. p. 10B. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  17. ^ Powers, Forrest (October 17, 1974). "Ear tuggers dabble in art". Minneapolis Star. p. 23B. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  18. ^ a b Hill, Dave (May 27, 1976). "Playing The Lame Duck Boogie At U100 Radio" (PDF). Sun. pp. 9, 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2011. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  19. ^ "WYOO-FM is sold to KDWB owner". Minneapolis Tribune. February 16, 1976. p. 9B. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  20. ^ "Changing Hands" (PDF). Broadcasting. May 17, 1976. p. 34. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  21. ^ "WYOO signals taken over by KDWB on FM and by WAYL on AM". Minneapolis Star. September 16, 1976. p. 4C. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  22. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1990/RR-1990-05-18.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  23. ^ "iHeart Plays Country Brand Blocker In Minneapolis". radioinsight.com. November 30, 2018. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  24. ^ "Country Aircheck". www.countryaircheck.com. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  25. ^ "Vont Leak and Bailey Hess added to Twin Cities Morning Radio". Radio Ink. May 23, 2024. Retrieved July 31, 2024.
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45°03′30″N 93°07′28″W / 45.058306°N 93.124389°W / 45.058306; -93.124389