KQAM | |
City: | Wichita, Kansas |
Area: | South Central Kansas |
Branding: | The Big Talker |
Format: | Talk radio |
Frequency: | 1480 kHz |
Repeater: | 99.7 KGHF-HD4 (Belle Plaine) |
Class: | B |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
Facility Id: | 61362 |
Owner: | Steckline Communications, Inc. |
Sister Stations: | KGHF, KGSO |
Website: | KQAM Online |
KQAM (1480 AM) is a commercial station in Wichita, Kansas. It carries a talk radio format and is owned by Steckline Communications, along with sports radio KGSO and classic country KGHF. The studios and offices are on South Maize Road in Wichita.
By day, KQAM is powered at 5,000 watts; to protect other stations on 1480 AM, it reduces power to 1,000 watts at night. It uses a directional antenna at all times with a four-tower array. The transmitter is off East 29th Street North in Wichita, near Chisholm Creek.[1]
Weekdays on KQAM begin with a news, farm reports and information show, "The Morning News with John Wright." The rest of the weekday line up includes nationally syndicated conservative talk show hosts, including: Brian Kilmeade, Dan Bongino, Todd Starnes, Andy Hooser, Joe Pags, Jim Bohannon, America in the Morning with John Trout and First Light with Michael Toscano. Starting at 4 p.m., Andy Hooser hosts “The Voice of Reason,” a conservative talk show directed at millennials. Hooser has extended his show to national networks due to his success.
Weekends feature shows on home repair, technology, movies, beer, cigars and farm news. Weekend syndicated hosts include Larry Elder, Leo Laporte, Mark Moss, Kim Komando. World and national news is provided by CBS Radio News.
On October 7, 1936, the station signed on the air as KANS, representing the word Kansas. In the 1960s and 1970s, it was owned by Swanco Broadcasting. Its call sign was KLEO, and for many years, was a popular Top 40 station. On September 2, 1980, KLEO flipped to adult contemporary as KWKN.[2] In late 1982, the KLEO call letters returned, though the station flipped to MOR/adult standards on September 24, 1984.[3] [4] On October 5, 1989, KLEO flipped to traditional country as KZSN, complementing sister station KZSN-FM's contemporary country format.[5] KZSN would eventually give way to a simulcast with the FM station; this lasted until September 25, 1997, when it assumed KQAM's call letters and flipped to sports talk.[6]
In 2002, the station was sold to The Walt Disney Company from Entercom for $2 million.[7] With the sale, KQAM became Wichita's Radio Disney network affiliate on July 23, 2002.[8] [9]
On November 12, 2009, Disney/ABC announced that they would sell KQAM to Steckline Communications. According to Greg Steckline, the owner of the company, he wasn't aiming to purchase but "this one just kind of happened. We just happened to be in the right place at the right time." Steckline paid $350,000 for KQAM. On January 6, 2010, KQAM dropped Radio Disney, unveiling the lineup for its talk format as a companion to its sister station, sports radio KGSO.
Steckline Communications also owns KIUL (Garden City, Kansas), KYUL (Scott City, Kansas), and KGYN (Guymon, Oklahoma).[10]
KQAM began simulcasting on translator K273CX (102.5 FM) in October 2016. The simulcast would be dropped in May 2022, when the translator began simulcasting recently acquired sister station KHLT-FM's HD2 sub-channel.