WBGN (AM)

WBGN (1340 AM) is an oldies formatted radio station licensed to Bowling Green, Kentucky, United States. The station is currently owned by Forever Communications, Inc.[2] as part of a conglomerate with Glasgow–licensed country music station WLYE-FM (94.5 FM), Auburn–licensed country station WBVR-FM (96.7 FM), and Smiths Grove–licensed Top 40/CHR station WUHU (107.1 FM). All four stations share studios on Scottsville Road in southern Bowling Green, and its transmitter is located off Church Avenue in the northern part of the city.

WBGN
Broadcast areaBowling Green, Kentucky
Northern Nashville, Tennessee
Frequency1340 kHz
BrandingAM 1340 & FM 94.5 WBGN
Programming
FormatOldies
AffiliationsU of L Sports Network
Nashville Predators Radio Network
Ownership
OwnerForever Communications, Inc.
WUHU, WBVR-FM, WLYE-FM
History
First air date
November 24, 1959
Call sign meaning
Bowling GreeN, KY[1]
Technical information
Facility ID27243
ClassC
Power1,000 watts unlimited
Transmitter coordinates
37°0′34″N 86°27′9″W
Translator(s)94.5 W233CZ (Bowling Green)
Links
WebcastListen live
WebsiteAM 1340 & 94.5 FM WBGN

To complement its AM signal, WBGN operates an FM translator station on 94.5 FM under the callsign W233CZ. That station's transmitter is shared with the AM signal.


History

The station's construction permit, which was initially filed in July 1958,[3] was granted by the Federal Communications Commission on May 18, 1959, and the station first signed on the air on November 24 of that same year. The FCC granted the official license on May 31, 1960. It was originally owned by J. Paul Brown and Robert L. Proctor, doing business as Bowling Green Broadcasting Company. The station broadcast originally broadcast a Rock format, then it began broadcasting a country format, but switched to a Top 40/CHR format. From 1964 until 1982, WBGN was the original flagship station of Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football and basketball games of the Hilltopper Sports Radio Network, with Wes Strader and Bud Tyler (originally from WLBJ) making the play-by-play commentary on those broadcasts.[4][5] This included the basketball team's 1971 Final Four appearance.[5]

WBGN's format changed from Top 40/CHR to Top 40 Oldies, in 1985. In April 1988, WBGN was purchased by Hilltopper Broadcasting, another locally based radio broadcasting firm, which at the time owned Smiths Grove-licensed WBLG-FM (now WUHU), and switched back to a country music format. However, the station switched back to Top 40 Oldies in 1990, this time broadcasting the music from a satellite service called "The Oldies Channel". This format lasted until Forever Communications purchased the station, and converted it into a Sports radio station by affiliating WBGN with ESPN Radio.[4]

The station affiliated with Fox Sports Radio after WWKU and WCDS became the ESPN Radio affiliates.

In December 2016, WBGN launched low-powered FM repeater W300DA, broadcasting at 107.9 MHz, to bring WBGN's programming to the FM dial. In February 2017, WBGN's Fox Sports Radio affiliation ended when both WBGN-AM and W300DA became a simulcast of Glasgow-based WLYE-FM, a Classic Country music station in the area.[6]

In December 2019, WBGN's simulcasting with WLYE was suspended to stunt with Christmas music until December 30, 2019, whem WBGN dropped its Christmas music stunt and flipped to oldies as "AM 1340 & 107.9 FM WBGN" with the slogan "Good Times, Great Oldies", thus returning the Oldies format back to the station and the entire Bowling Green radio market area.[7]

Programming

WBGN's simulcast with WLYE was not full-time. WBGN still retains the rights to certain sporting events. It is also the local affiliate for the U of L Sports Network broadcasting Louisville Cardinals football and basketball, as well as the National Hockey League's Nashville Predators games from the Nashville Predators Radio Network. The station was Kentucky Sports Radio's Bowling Green affiliate until January 2019, when the program moved to WKCT.

Until the end of the 2021 season, WBGN was also the official local broadcaster for Bowling Green Hot Rods baseball. Those broadcasts moved to WKCT beginning with the 2022 season.[8]

References

  1. "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  2. "WBGN Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. "Application Filed For Third Radio Station Here". Bowling Green Daily News, July ??, 1958.
  4. WBGN History. 1340BGN.net
  5. Nash, Francis M. (1995). Towers Over Kentucky: A History of Radio and TV in the Bluegrass State. ISBN 9781879688933.
  6. Willie Network | Home of Today's Country Stars and Legends
  7. "WBGN Brings Oldies to Bowling Green".
  8. Nations, Jeff (March 13, 2022). "Hot Rods, Talk 104.1 FM announce radio partnership." Bowling Green Daily News, March 13, 2022, page 7B.
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