WCCD

WCCD (1000 AM) branded Radio 1000 is a commercial daytime-only radio station licensed to Parma, Ohio, serving Greater Cleveland and parts of surrounding Northeast Ohio. Owned and operated by New Spirit Revival Center Ministries, Inc., WCCD broadcasts a combination of gospel music and religious programming. The station studios are located at The New Spirit Revival Church in the Cleveland suburb of Cleveland Heights,[1] while the station transmitter resides in North Royalton.

WCCD
CityParma, Ohio
Broadcast areaGreater Cleveland
Frequency1000 kHz
BrandingRadio 1000
SloganThe Praizeness Station in the Nation
Programming
FormatGospel music/religious
Ownership
OwnerNew Spirit Revival Center Ministries, Inc.
History
First air dateMay 31, 1973 (1973-05-31)
Former call signsWSUM (197587)
WCCD (19872001)
WHK (2001)
Call sign meaningConfraternity of Christian Doctrine
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID25522
ClassD
Power500 watts (daytime only)
Transmitter coordinates41°19′11.00″N 81°46′7.00″W
Links
Public license informationProfile
LMS
WebcastListen live
Websiteradio1000.org

WCCD broadcasts with only 500 watts, and it signs off at sunset to protect WMVP/Chicago and a number of other clear channel stations on adjacent frequencies. 1000 AM is a United States and Mexican clear-channel frequency; KOMO, WMVP and XEOY share Class A status.

History

WCCD began as WSUM on May 31, 1973.[2] The initial lineup included longtime television fixtures Jim Doney, Linn Sheldon and Gib Shanley (sports director), plus Ted Alexander and Joey James. In addition, a full news staff included Michael Hissam (news director), Pat Longworth and Nancy Watson. Just a few months after signon, WSUM's operators went bankrupt and the station leaves the air.[3]

The Christian Broadcasting Association of Canton purchased WSUM in October 1976 and resumed programming under new management. It airs religious programs on a pre-taped basis from local and national sources. The rest of the day is talk programming with hosts including Merle Pollis.

The station had been owned for a number of years by Salem Communications. In October 2003, Salem changed WCCD's format, dropping all of the religious and brokered programming (most of which moved to WHKW) and installed a variant of Salem Radio Network's conservative-based talk format dubbed "The Voice." The hosts on the all-satellite lineup included Bill Bennett, Mike Gallagher, Dennis Prager, Michael Medved, and Hugh Hewitt. Plans were for a call letter change to WVVC, but had fallen though.

By July 2004, Salem reacquired the 1420 frequency, and relocated WCCD's format over to the station, relaunched as WHK. WCCD was then put up for sale, airing a mix of Christian contemporary music and leased-time gospel music paid for by the New Spirit Revival Center Church, who ultimately bought the station in April 2005 and flipped it to a locally based gospel format.

The Rev. Darrell C. Scott, co-founder of the New Spirit Revival Center, hosts a daily program on WCCD.[4]

gollark: They aren't somehow convincing people to join a hive mind. Probably.
gollark: I don't know. There was the Cambridge Analytica mess but apparently they weren't actually that effective and it was mostly just marketing.
gollark: Surely if it was this easy to manipulate large amounts of people into weird political views someone would already be doing it.
gollark: I am still satisfied with the IPS displays on my laptop/phone for now.
gollark: General COVID-19 breakage and a shortage of drivers because brexit.

References

  1. Smith, Robert L. (October 27, 2005). "Worshipping New Spirit Revival Center". The Plain Dealer. Advance Publications. p. E3. Retrieved March 12, 2017 via Cleveland.com.
  2. WebMasters, Mike Olszewski (2002-03-04). "Cleveland, Ohio Broadcast Radio Archives Project". Cleve-radio.com. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
  3. "On-Air". The All New WCCD Radio 1000. Retrieved 2020-08-12.
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