- WHKZ
Infobox Radio station
name = WHKZ
area =Warren, Ohio
branding = "AM 1440 The Word"
slogan = "Cleveland's Christian Talk"
airdate = early 1940s (as WRRN)
frequency = 1440 (kHz)
format = Religious
power = 5,000watt s
class = B
owner =Salem Communications
website = http://www.whkwradio.com
former_callsigns =WHKW (2001-2005)WFHM (2001)WHKW (2001)
WRBP (1998-2001)
WRRO (1981-1998)
WHHH (1948-1981)
WRRN (early 1940's-1948)
sister_stations = WFHM, WHK,WHKW ,WHKZ
callsign_meaning = |WHKZ (1440 AM) is a
radio station inWarren, Ohio , USA. The station carries religious programming from the Salem Network. The bulk of WHKZ's programming is simulcast fromWHKW on 1220 kHz inCleveland, Ohio .WHKZ simulcasts WHKW throughout much of the broadcast day, but does break away in the late evenings to air Warren native
Hugh Hewitt 's talk show, which is based atKRLA in Los Angeles and syndicated bySalem Communications . Some other infomercials and religious programming air separately between the two stations.In February 2008, an agreement was reached for Pittsburgh's Pentecostal Temple Church to acquire WHKZ from Salem Communications for reported sale price of $550,000.cite news |work=NorthEast Radio Watch |title=This Week's Bloodbath: Citadel |first=Scott |last=Fybush |url=http://www.fybush.com/NERW/2008/080303/nerw.html |date=2008-03-03]
History
The station originally signed on as WRRN, the call letters being a contraction of "Warren." In
1948 , [http://docs.newsbank.com/openurl?ctx_ver=z39.88-2004&rft_id=info:sid/iw.newsbank.com:NewsBank:ABJB&rft_val_format=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rft_dat=0EB627764512D0C1&svc_dat=InfoWeb:aggregated4&req_dat=0D1C2ED46ABD2E15] it was purchased by Helen Hart Hurlburt, publisher of the "Tribune-Chronicle", and the call sign was changed to WHHH, to reflect her initials. Under her ownership, a construction permit was obtained for a television station, WHHH-TV on channel 67 in the early 1950s [http://members.aol.com/cingram/television/dumonta11.htm] , but the station never made it onto the air, probably because of the vagaries of operating a UHF station at the time.Hurlburt sold the station to Warren Broadcasting Co. in
1981 , and the call letters were changed to WRRO (for "WaRRen, Ohio") onMay 4 , 1981. The station was subsequently purchased in February 1996 by Star Communications, Inc., headed by Art Greenberg and Phil Levine of Cleveland. The call sign was changed to WRBP onSeptember 25 ,1998 .Star Communications sold the station to Salem Communications in early
2001 , and the calls were changed to WHKW onMarch 15 ,2001 . The new call letters where adapted from the calls of WHK in Cleveland which Salem had purchased five years earlier, with the second "W" either standing for Warren or for WHK's "The Word" slogan.It operated briefly as
WFHM fromJuly 6 toAugust 16 ,2001 , when Salem parked the WFHM call letters here while operating its newly obtained 95.5 FM station in Cleveland as WHK-FM, then changed back to WHKW. When Salem Communications moved the WHKW calls to Cleveland for its station on 1220 kHz (as the WHK callsign moved back to its' original home of 1420 kHz, the call letters of the Warren station were changed to WHKZ onApril 13 ,2005 .References
External links
*AMQ|WHKZ
*AML|WHKZ
*AMARB|WHKZ
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.