WLJN

WLJN & WLJW are the call letters of 2 AM radio stations located in Traverse City, Michigan and Cadillac, Michigan respectively. Both stations broadcast Christian talk and teaching programming. The call letters stand for "We're Lifting Jesus' Name."[1]

WLJN & WLJW
CityWLJN: Elmwood Township, Michigan
WLJW: Cadillac, Michigan
Broadcast areaWLJN: Traverse City, Michigan
WLJW: Cadillac, Michigan
FrequencyWLJN: 1400 kHz
WLJW: 1370 kHz
BrandingThe Source
Programming
FormatChristian Talk and Teaching
Ownership
OwnerGood News Media
Sister stationsWLJN-FM, WLJW-FM
History
First air dateWLJN: December 23, 1982
WLJW: 1967 (as WWAM)
Former call signsWLJN:
none
WLJW:
WKJF (1/1/82-3/5/04)
WWAM (1967-1/1/82)
Call sign meaningWLJN: We're Lifting Jesus' Name
WLJW: We're Lifting Jesus' Word
Technical information
Facility IDWLJN: 24603
WLJW: 73169
ClassWLJN: B
WLJW: B
PowerWLJN: 640 watts
WLJW: 5,000 watts (daytime)
WLJW: 1,000 watts (nighttime)
Translator(s)WLJN: W281CG (104.1 MHz, Traverse City
WLJW: W264DQ (100.7 MHz, Cadillac)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitemysourceam.com

History

Good News Media, Inc. was established in early 1981 to lay the groundwork for getting the station on the air. Within 2 months after GNMI was started, WTCM changed from 1400 kHz to 580 kHz, opening the way for WLJN to go on the air at the 1400 kHz frequency. The station's first broadcast day was 2 days before Christmas in 1982.[1] In 1994, application was made by GNMI to broadcast at 104.5 MHz, but nothing came about of it as 104.5 in Traverse City is now home to WZTC. In 2004, Cadillac radio station WKJF-AM, 1370 kHz, was acquired by GNMI, and became WLJW shortly afterward, simulcasting WLJN-AM.[2] The call letters for WLJW stand for "We're Lifting Jesus' Word."[2]

WKJN's old logo
gollark: I've read a bit about it, and it's probably 80% insanity given the amount of stuff they do to maintain backward compatibility.
gollark: Yes, they could probably just put basically anything in there and it would be hard to do anything about it.
gollark: No, I mean it would be hard to do in the various open source OSes.
gollark: > Maybe you've never thought about this, but if there are 100 devs working for free you'd only need to hire 50 devs to compromise all their code.That's, um, still quite a lot given the large amounts of developers involved, and code review exists, and this kind of conspiracy could *never* stay secret for very long, and if you have an obvious backdoor obvious people are fairly likely to look at it and notice.
gollark: Those are increasingly not working because of better security in stuff, which is probably good.

References

  1. WLJN AM 1400 Elmwood Twp/Traverse City Michiguide.com. Accessed February 3, 2015
  2. Michiguide.com - WLJW History Michiguide.com. Accessed February 3, 2015


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