WARH
WARH (106.5 MHz "106.5 The Arch") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Granite City, Illinois and serving Greater St. Louis including sections of Illinois and Missouri.[1] WARH is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting and airs an Adult Hits radio format. The studios and offices are in Creve Coeur, Missouri (although a St. Louis address is used).[2] The transmitter is located near Resurrection Cemetery off Mackenzie Road in St. Louis.[3]
City | Granite City, Illinois |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Greater St. Louis |
Frequency | 106.5 MHz FM (HD Radio) |
Branding | 106.5 The Arch |
Slogan | You Never Know What You'll Hear Next. |
Programming | |
Format | Adult Hits HD2: Talk (simulcast of KTMY/Minneapolis-St. Paul) HD3: "Latter-day Saints Channel" |
Ownership | |
Owner | Hubbard Broadcasting (St. Louis FCC License Sub, LLC) |
Sister stations | WIL-FM, WXOS, KPNT, KSHE |
History | |
First air date | November 24, 1965 |
Former call signs | WGNU-FM (1965-1977) WWWK (1977-1987) KWK-FM (1987-1988) WKBQ (1988-1994) WKKX (1994-2000) WSSM (2000-2005) |
Call sign meaning | The ARcH (taken from St. Louis landmark, the Gateway Arch) |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 74577 |
Class | C1 |
ERP | 90,000 watts |
HAAT | 309 meters (1014 ft) |
Links | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | 1065TheArch.com |
"106.5 The Arch" using the primary slogan "You never know what we're going to play next." The station's name pays tribute to the iconic Gateway Arch monument in Downtown St. Louis on the western bank of the Mississippi River. The format is musically similar to the syndicated Jack FM stations in the U.S. & Canada. However, "The Arch" uses a live and local DJ staff around the clock, whereas "Jack" stations are for the most part automated with no live voices.
WARH broadcasts in HD. The HD1 signal carries the adult hits format. WARH-HD2 carries co-owned KTMY from Minneapolis, known as "My Talk Radio." Before March 2017, it featured less familiar rock songs from the 1960s to the present, branded as "106-5 The Deep."
History
Early Years
On November 24, 1965, WGNU-FM first signed on.[4] It was the FM counterpart of AM 920 WGNU, under the ownership of Chuck Norman. Both stations simulcast a country music format for Granite City and its surrounding communities. Norman sold the FM station to Doubleday Broadcasting in 1977. Doubleday boosted the station's signal to cover most of the St. Louis radio market. The call sign was changed to WWWK, with the station simulcasting the album oriented rock (AOR) format of AM 1380 KWK (now KXFN).[5] The stations called themselves "Stereo WK."
In November 1986, the two stations were bought by Chase Broadcasting. The simulcast ended in 1987, with AM 1380 becoming Oldies KGLD, while FM 106.5 (now with the call sign KWK-FM) moved to a Top 40 format.
In February 1988, KWK-FM changed call letters to WKBQ-FM, and retained the Top 40 format but switched to the handle "Q106.5." In September 1991, WKBQ-FM brought the morning team of "Steve & DC" to St. Louis from Birmingham, Alabama. In 1993, "Steve & DC" and WKBQ-FM would face controversy over comments made during the May 10th morning show and was the subject of much local news coverage for weeks. Also in 1993, WKBQ-FM again was simulcast on AM 1380.
Country Kix 106.5
In late 1993, WKBQ-FM was purchased by Zimmer Radio Group of Cape Girardeau, Missouri. On January 20, 1994, WKBQ-FM and country-formatted sister station WKKX would swap frequencies, with WKBQ-FM moving to 104.1 FM, and WKKX moving to 106.5 FM (AM 1380 would continue to simulcast WKBQ-FM after the swap).[6][7] The station became "New Country Kix 106.5," with the popular morning duo "Steve & DC" heard for the second time on the 106.5 MHz frequency. That led to the team scoring its biggest ratings in St. Louis. The "Steve & DC" morning show consistently ranked #1 in the all-important Persons 18-49 and Persons 25-54 demographics on WKKX.
Ownership by Bonneville
In November 1996, Emmis Broadcasting bought the station. In 2000, Emmis swapped WKKX to Bonneville International for Los Angeles country music station KZLA (now KLLI). At 12:00 a.m. on October 4, 2000, after the sale to Bonneville closed, WKKX changed call letters to WSSM and adopted a Smooth Jazz format as "Smooth 106.5" (later "106.5 Smooth Jazz").[8]
On April 10, 2005, after playing "Thank You" by Euge Groove, the station adopted its current adult hits format, branded as "106.5 The Arch." The first song on "The Arch" was "Roll With the Changes" by REO Speedwagon.[9] The station adopted its current WARH call letters on April 18, 2005. WARH was initially programmed by Jules Riley. The Program Director since 2016 is Scott Roddy, who also serves as the Program Director for sister station WIL-FM.
Sale to Hubbard Broadcasting
On January 19, 2011, Bonneville announced the sale of WARH, as well as 16 other stations in four markets (St. Louis, Chicago, Cincinnati and Washington, D.C.), to Minneapolis-based Hubbard Broadcasting.[10] The sale was completed on April 29, 2011.[11] Hubbard has kept the adult hits format in place, which continues as one of St. Louis' top ten stations.
References
- FCC.gov/WARH
- 1065TheArch.com/contact
- Radio-Locator.com/WARH
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1969 page B-54
- Broadcasting Yearbook 1982 page C-141
- Stark, Phyllis (January 15, 1994). "Vox Jox". Billboard. 106 (3): 64.
- http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1994/RR-1994-01-07.pdf
- http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2000/RR-2000-10-06.pdf
- http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2005/RR-2005-04-15.pdf
- "$505M sale: Bonneville sells Chicago, D.C., St. Louis and Cincinnati to Hubbard". Radio-Info.com. January 19, 2011. Archived from the original on January 22, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- "Hubbard deal to purchase Bonneville stations closes". Radio Ink. May 2, 2011. Archived from the original on March 12, 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
External links
- WARH official website
- MissouriRadio.net
- WARH in the FCC's FM station database
- WARH on Radio-Locator
- WARH in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
- KWK FM 106 AM 13.8 A tribute site for KWK "The Rockin' Best!"