WIBM

WIBM (AM 1450) is a country music station licensed to Jackson Radio Works in Jackson, Michigan. This company also owns news/talk WKHM AM 970 and hot AC WKHM-FM "K105.3". WIBM's programming is also heard on FM via translator W240DG at 95.9 MHz, and WKHM-FM HD-2.

WIBM
CityJackson, Michigan
Frequency1450 kHz
(HD Radio via WKHM-FM-105.3 HD3)
Branding95.9 The Power Cow
Programming
FormatCountry
Ownership
OwnerJackson Radio Works
Sister stationsWKHM, WKHM-FM
History
First air dateNovember 20, 1927 (in Jackson)
Former call signsWCXI (3/29/1994-12/8/1995)
WIBM (4/8/1987-3/29/1994)
WXCM (6/25/1980-4/8/1987)
WIBM (6/3/1925-6/25/1980)
Technical information
Facility ID9248
ClassC
Power810 watts
Translator(s)95.9 W240DG (Jackson)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website959thepowercow.com

History

WIBM was first licensed on June 3, 1925[1] to Billy Maine in Chicago, Illinois as a portable broadcasting station.[2] The call letters were sequentially assigned, had no particular meaning, and were not associated with International Business Machines (IBM). However, taking advantage of the coincidence, in later years the station's Top 40 music record surveys were designed to resemble an IBM computer keypunch card.

January 1926 advertisement promoting WIBM's theater broadcasts at Carbondale, Illinois[3]

Portable stations could be transported from place-to-place on movable platforms such as trucks. They were commonly hired out for a few weeks at a time to theaters located in small towns that didn't have their own radio stations, to be used for special programs broadcast to the local community.

Toward the end of 1926 ownership of WIBM was transferred to C. L. Carrell of Chicago, Illinois,[4] joining a roster of seven portable stations operated by Carrell. However, due to the difficulty of regulating "moving targets", in May 1927 the newly formed Federal Radio Commission warned that it would soon stop licensing portable facilities.[5] Facing deletion, Carrell arranged for the station to be permanently moved to Jackson, Michigan.[6]

WIBM began broadcasting from Jackson on November 20, 1927,[7] from the 9th floor of the Blake Building (then known as the Reynolds Building). In 1930 station ownership was transferred from C. L. Carrell to WIBM, Incorporated. In 1941, with the implementation of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement, WIBM moved from 1370 kHz to the current 1450 kHz. Following several studio moves, the station began operating out of 2511 Kibby Road in September 1948.[7]

Jack Paar, future host of The Tonight Show, was a part-time announcer at the station during the mid-1930s. Another WIBM notable is broadcast consultant Bill Hennes, afternoon drive personality on WIBM during the early 1960s.

In the 1960s and 1970s, WIBM served as the Jackson area's Top 40 music station. Casey Kasem's American Top 40 was heard on WIBM throughout the 1970s. In 1980, the Top 40 format was moved to its FM sister at 94.1 (now WWDK and no longer co-owned), and the AM station became WXCM with a country music format which continued until 1987, when the station went back to the heritage WIBM calls and became a simulcast of the oldies format on 94.1 WIBM-FM.

Previous logo

In 1994, WIBM (AM) was purchased by Cascades Broadcasting, then owners of WKHM-AM/FM, which changed its calls to WCXI and returned to a country format; the WIBM calls returned once again the following year. In 1997 the station picked up the soft AC/easy listening format from sister WKHM-FM after the FM changed to an adult CHR format as "K105.3". WIBM was known as "Easy Relaxed 1450 AM" until adopting an ESPN Radio sports format in March 1999.

In 2014, WIBM became available on AM station 1450 and FM station 101.9.[8]

One of WIBM's most popular shows on ESPN Radio 101.9FM was "The Nooner" with Greg O'Connor. O'Connor, affectionately known as the GOC, has been hosting his afternoon sports show on WIBM since 2000.[9]

On June 30, 2016 WIBM changed their format from sports (which remains on WKHM-HD2 and W270CJ) to country, branded as "95.9 The Power Cow", simulcast on WKHM-HD3 and translator W240DG 95.9 FM Jackson.[10]

gollark: I'm someone who hangs around doing stuff & things.
gollark: I managed to get full disk encryption on arch.
gollark: Programming HTML in raw *ternary*?
gollark: This isn't very surprising.
gollark: ./a.outfish: “./a.out” terminated by signal SIGSEGV (Address boundary error)

References

  1. "Date First Licensed", FCC History Cards for WIBM.
  2. "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, July 1, 1925, page 3.
  3. Barth Theatre (advertisement), Carbondale (Illinois) Free Press, January 25, 1926, page 2.
  4. "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, December 31, 1926, page 8.
  5. "Portable broadcasting stations licensed only for a limited period" (General Order No. 6, April 26, 1927), Radio Service Bulletin, April 30, 1927, page 15.
  6. "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, July 31, 1928, page 17.
  7. "WIBM radio has had many locations" by Susanne Weible, Jackson Citizen Patriot, January 21, 2008 (mlive.com) Due to a typographical error, in some cases (for example, the WIBM entry in the 1958 edition of Broadcasting Yearbook), a date of "November 20, 1924" has been incorrectly listed for the station's Jackson debut.
  8. Coming Soon! - WIBM & WKHM
  9. Mike Pryson (December 20, 2013). "Tom and Greg O'Connor, who combined have broadcast on Jackson's airwaves for more than 55 years, named winners of 2010 Al Cotton Award". Jackson Citizen Patriot. Retrieved 2016-11-21. (MLive.com)
  10. "Power Cow Charges Into Jackson, MI" by Lance Venta, June 30, 2016. (Radioinsight.com)

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