WZOM

WZOM (105.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to Defiance, Ohio, United States, the station is currently owned by iHeartMedia.[1][2] In February 2002, the station changed from an Oldies format to the current country music format.

WZOM
Frequency105.7 MHz
Branding105.7 The Bull
Programming
FormatCountry music
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Ownership
Owner
WONW, WDFM, WNDH
History
First air date
August 25, 1989 (1989-08-25)
Technical information
Facility ID40711
ClassA
ERP6,000 watts
HAAT100 meters (330 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
41°13′23″N 84°22′36″W
Links
WebcastListen live (via iHeartRadio)
Websitewww.1057thebull.com

History

WZOM signed on the air on August 25, 1989. Its first official programming was a high school football game between Defiance High School and Napoleon High School. The game featured the return of local sports announcer Marv Sebring. Sebring was known for a colorful call of local sports and he had an amazing memory for local sports history.

For the next two days the station ran a tape loop of three oldies, three country and three random songs asking residents to vote for their favorite format. The oldies format was a fan favorite with a three to one margin over other choices. At 6AM on Monday August 28, 1989 the Zoomer kicked off with a "Classic Rock 40" oldies format. The original staff members were Rich Gates, Bob James, Andie Germann as the morning team, Rich Vargo afternoons, Larry Miller in the evenings. Also included in that mix was Jack Goldblatt(Daniels). The remainder of the day was basically music from a syndicated music source but the station was so well programmed that community members would want to visit the on-air personalities that were from Dallas Texas. The transitions were seamless.

The first owner of the station was James Phillips a local insurance man and small town, part-time polka announcer. The corporate name was The Great Wireless Talking Machine, inc. Phillips had hopes of bringing polka music to the air in Defiance. His consultant Chris Cage (WBNS, WBYR) recommended hiring Robert Krouse as general manager. Krouse decided on the oldies format from the start since no local station was programming the format at that time.

Krouse left the station in July 1991 at that time Phillips added talk to part of the programming and within a year sold the station In a distress sale to Richard McBroom owner of WNDH and WONW. Later the station was sold to Clear Channel.

References

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