CKGM

This article is about CKGM, the Montreal radio station branded TSN Radio 690 since September 4, 2012. For the national radio network, see TSN Radio.
CKGM
City Montreal, Quebec
Broadcast area Greater Montreal
Branding TSN Radio 690
Slogan Montreal's Sports Radio
Frequency 690 kHz (AM)
First air date 1959
Format Sports
Power 50,000 watts
Class A
Transmitter coordinates 45°17′43.08″N 73°43′18.12″W / 45.2953000°N 73.7217000°W / 45.2953000; -73.7217000
Callsign meaning CK Greater Montreal
Former callsigns CHTX (1989-1991)
CKIS (1991-1996)
Former frequencies 980 kHz (1959-1990)
990 kHz (1990-2012)
Affiliations TSN Radio
Owner Bell Media Radio
Programmed by TSN (Bell Media 80% / ESPN 20%)
(Bell Media Canada Radio 2013 Partnership)
Sister stations CFCF-DT, CJAD, CJFM, CHOM
Webcast Listen Live
Website TSN Radio 690

CKGM (branded as TSN Radio 690) is an English language Canadian radio station in Montreal. Formerly an affiliate of sports radio network The Team, it was one of three stations to retain the sports format after the network folded in 2002 until it switched to the TSN Radio branding as in October 2011. The station has an all-sports format since May 2001.

CKGM officially began broadcasting on 690 kHz, as a 50,000 watts clear-channel Class I-A station, on September 4, 2012. It changed its branding to TSN Radio 690, accordingly. Its nighttime signal covers most of the eastern half of North America, including three-fourths of Canada. Its transmitters are located near Mercier, while its studios are located on René Lévesque Boulevard East in Montreal.

CKGM is best known for having been a legendary and influential top 40 station in its heyday from 1970 to 1986.

Current programming

Local programming on the station includes Melnick in the Afternoon with Mitch Melnick, Off the Cuff with "Knuckles" Chris Nilan, The Montreal Forum, an all sports show and a forum for Montreal Canadiens fans with Tony Marinaro, and The Morning Show with Conor Mckenna, Rick Moffat and Shaun Starr. These shows mainly focus on Montreal Canadiens analysis, especially during hockey season, but also address all the major sports in North American. TSN Radio 690 airs in-depth coverage of the Montreal Canadiens, as the English language flagship broadcaster. It features lengthy pre and post-game coverage for each game.

TSN Radio 690, carries network national feeds of the NFL, MLB, NASCAR and some NHL playoffs and the World Junior Hockey Championships. The station also carries some ESPN Radio programming.

The station was also part of Canada's Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium

TSN Radio 690 also has rights for the golf's The British Open, The U.S. Open, UEFA Euro 2012 and 2016, NBA Playoffs, and Sunday Night Football as part of TSN's broadcasting rights for the events.

On June 22, 2011, Bell Media announced it had signed a deal with the Montreal Canadiens to become the Canadiens' official English-language radio broadcaster for the next 7 seasons.[1]

Live sports

TSN Radio 690 is the flagship station for the following teams' radio broadcasts:

TSN Radio 690 also features live coverage of the following:

Notable staff

History

Early days

CKGM was founded by Geoff Stirling and opened on December 7, 1959. The station was then on 980 kHz with a power of 10,000 watts full-time as a class B station, using a directional antenna with different patterns day and night (the nighttime pattern being somewhat tighter). The 980 kHz frequency had been previously occupied by CKVL. While most of the station's programming was devoted to music (playing Top 40 hits), the station also had a number of open-line talk shows. CKGM 980 was very well listened to in its heyday of Top 40 hits in the Northern Vermont and Northern New York areas due to their closeness to Montreal.

An FM sister station, CKGM-FM (later known as CHOM-FM starting in 1970) was opened on July 16, 1963. After a few weeks of simulcast with CKGM, the FM station adopted a beautiful music format on September 1.

In 1963, a molotov cocktail was thrown through a window, but was faulty and did not ignite inside the studios.

In 1965, CKGM hired open-line host Pat Burns, famous for his controversial opinions, especially on language issues. Known in particular for featuring prominently on his show Francophones who were proud of being bilingual or of being assimilated to the Anglophone community (again, depending on the point of view), Burns would remain on the air until early 1969, only being driven out of Montreal after a boycott campaign targeting the station's advertisers was launched. Burns was sufficiently controversial to be publicly denounced by Quebec Premier Daniel Johnson Sr., and the station received numerous bomb threats during the late 1960s. The station had already a history of bombing.

In 1968, CKGM moved from 1455 Drummond in downtown Montreal to 1310 Greene in Westmount.

CKGM became the Montreal Expos' flagship for their first season in Montreal in 1969. (Baseball would move to CFCF the following year.)

Top 40 era

On January 1, 1970, CKGM changed its format to become a full-time Top 40 station. Success was immediate, as CKGM managed to beat direct competitor CFOX, also a full-time Top 40 station, in the Fall 1970 BBM ratings. CKGM would quickly become one of North America's legendary AM Top 40 stations.

Legendary morningman Ralph Lockwood, formerly of CFOX, made his debut on CKGM on October 2, 1972. He would remain with the station until late 1981.

In 1975, CKGM introduced "La Connection Française", referring to a trio of bilingual personalities (Rob Christie, Marc Denis[4] and Scott Carpentier) which used both English and French on the air and played songs of both languages. As CKGM remained an English-language station, this resulted in French-language stations complaining to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) and even refusing to observe quotas of Francophone music. On-air bilingualism would remain a distinctive CKGM feature until stringent CRTC regulation forbidding it (and also enforcing quotas on the Francophone side) went into effect on January 1, 1980.

CKGM got a record-high number of listeners among English-language stations in Montreal according to the Fall 1976 BBM ratings that were released on December 13 of that year, thanks in part to the large numbers of Francophones who listened to the station (almost 40% of CKGM listeners were French-speaking).

During its Top 40 era, CKGM was one of a handful of Canadian radio stations to carry American Top 40 with Casey Kasem.

Sale to CHUM Limited

On August 20, 1985, CKGM and sister station CHOM-FM were sold to CHUM Limited. CKGM switched its format to gold-based adult contemporary under the "Lite Rock, Less Talk", and "Favourites of Yesterday and Today" monikers a few months later, on January 15, 1986.

The station returned to a Top 40 format on February 10, 1989, changing its call sign to CHTX in an attempt to distance itself as far as possible from its earlier days as a Top 40 station that even included adopting a new phone number. CHTX identified itself on-air as "980 Hits", and also infamously identified itself as "the station that plays the most music allowed by law" (in reference here to CRTC regulations that limited hit music on FM stations). Anecdotal evidence suggests that at least some listeners wondered if there was in fact a legal limitation on the number of songs radio stations can play.

On September 14, 1990, at 5 PM, CHTX moved to the adjacent 990 kHz frequency,[5] increasing its power to 50,000 watts full-time from a new transmitter site located in Ville Mercier, and converting itself to AM stereo. However, 990 was a class B frequency, requiring the station to use a directional antenna which is slightly directional during the day and extremely directional at night to protect clear channel (class A) stations CBW in Winnipeg, Manitoba and CBY in Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador. The switch occurred one week later than initially scheduled, on orders from the federal Department of Communications, due to the "tense security situation" (the Oka Crisis) in the neighbouring Indian reserve of Kahnawake.

Another format change occurred on May 24, 1991, with the new format being oldies, although the station would also air Dr. Laura's open line show. The station changed its call sign to CKIS and identified itself as "Oldies 990".

The station returned to its original CKGM call sign on January 15, 1996, as the station moved to a talk radio format known as "Talk Radio With Attitude" which included a low amount of locally produced programming. For that reason, the station got abysmally low ratings, with fewer than 100,000 listeners. The CKIS calls moved to a Calgary radio station formerly owned by Rawlco, and as of 2009, are now used in a Toronto radio station.

When the 1998 Ice Storm took place, CKGM continued to rely on automation, making few efforts to broadcast adapted emergency information. On January 9 of that year, competitor CJAD lost its broadcast towers due to the accumulation of ice. After that station moved temporarily to 1410 kHz using the former facilities of CFMB, CKGM leased its signal to CJAD on a temporary basis, starting on January 22, 1998. (Technically, CKGM left the airwaves and was replaced on 990 kHz by CJAD.) CJAD returned to its assigned frequency of 800 kHz on May 29, 1998, and after two weeks of simulcast, CKGM returned on June 12, 1998, at Noon. The station took the opportunity to re-launch itself as a largely automated oldies station, again using the "Oldies 990" as its moniker (but keeping the CKGM call sign).

The Team 990

Team 990 logo

In September 2000, shortly after the CRTC made changes to radio ownership regulations allowing a single company to own up to four stations in a market, CHUM announced it would trade CKGM and sister station CHOM-FM to Standard Broadcasting (which already owned two stations in Montreal) in exchange for CFWM-FM in Winnipeg (a market where CHUM already had two stations). This move allowed Standard to acquire Winnipeg's CKMM-FM (Hot 103) & CFQX-FM (QX104.1).

However, a few months later, the CKGM portion of the deal was cancelled.[6] The company immediately announced that CKGM would be added to the list of CHUM-owned AM stations switching to an all-sports format on May 7, 2001, joining the new "The Team" network and identifying itself as "Team 990". CKGM became the radio flagship of the Montreal Expos a few days later, marking a return of baseball on English-language airwaves. The station would broadcast the last Expos' games as a Montreal franchise in 2004.

Even in the very last days before the switch to the new format, the largely automated CKGM continued to air a promo criticizing "those talk stations" (in addition to always playing the same songs in the very same order).

While most Team stations returned to music programming (generally oldies) on August 27, 2002, CKGM was one of the few stations where the all-sports format survived, and locally produced programming was increased.

The Team 990 is anchored by the 3pm-7pm drive show with Mitch Melnick. It's morning show features veteran broadcaster Elliot Price and Shaun Starr (Denis Casavant left in November 2011 to pursue his career at RDS television). Former NHLer PJ Stock hosted his own program daily 1-3pm. Stock, during 2010-2011 was part of the morning show at CHOM.

Other popular programs include the Delmar Cargo Habs Post Game show, which comes on after each Montreal Canadiens game.

Currently, CKGM has the broadcasting rights to NFL football (through Priszm Radio), Sunday night baseball, CFL Grey Cup and Montreal Canadiens hockey.

In the summer of 2007, Matthew Ross, host of Game Points, set The Team 990 station record by hosting a 10.5-hour marathon program.

Sale to CTVglobemedia

On June 22, 2007, CTVglobemedia purchased CKGM and most of the other assets of CHUM Limited following approval by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, while the Citytv stations were sold to Rogers Communications.

CKGM files for frequency swap

On September 7, 2011, the CRTC announced the applicants for the 690 kHz frequency previously occupied by CINF—and before then, had been the longtime home of CBF. Among these included Bell Media, who plan on using 690 as a new frequency for CKGM.[7] The reasoning for the swap is to take advantage of 690's around-the-clock clear-channel frequency, especially during nighttime hours when most sporting events, especially hockey, takes place; at 990, the station is forced to broadcast at a lower power at night, broadcasting directionally towards the north to protect CBW and CBY, significantly decreasing its coverage area in the suburban areas and on the South Shore. Other frequencies CKGM considered moving to was 940 kHz, though doing so would take six months to make the move, as opposed to three months if CKGM is awarded 690; and 600 kHz (formerly used by CINW's predecessor, CIQC, before moving to 940 in 1999), but it would require building new towers, and the only suitable site for broadcast is in Kahnawake, on land owned by competing broadcaster, Cogeco.[8]

On November 21, 2011, CKGM's relocation from 990 to 690 was approved by the CRTC.[9][10][11][12] The changeover took place on September 4, 2012, and its on-air branding was renamed TSN Radio 690.[13] Following the switchover, CKGM began a 90-day simulcast period, as requested and approved by the CRTC. On the week of November 27, 2012, CKGM began running an announcement on a loop on 990, reminding listeners to tune to 690; the announcement also mentions that CKGM will cease operations on 990 entirely on December 1, 2012. Sometime after this simulcast period has ended, the 990 AM frequency was transferred to Evanov Communications, who planned to launch its new LGBT-oriented station, CHRF ("Radio Fierté"), at 990 AM in early 2013.[9] However, due to technical considerations, Evanov applied for, and was awarded, the 980 AM frequency instead (the frequency previously used by CKGM), with a launch date of 2014.[14] Evanov originally applied for the new station to broadcast on 690.[9]

TSN Radio 990 logo, used from October 2011 to September 2012, when it moved to 690

TSN Radio

On October 3, 2011, Bell Media announced that the Team 990 would be relaunched (along with CFRW in Winnipeg) under the new TSN Radio banner, thus becoming known as TSN Radio 990 effective October 5, 2011.[15] It was renamed TSN Radio 690 after CKGM moved its frequency to AM 690 in September 2012.

In July 2012, in the midst of its proposed acquisition of Astral Media, Bell requested permission from the CRTC to convert CKGM into a French-language station, with plans to broadcast a sports talk format in French, in conjunction with TSN's French-language sister network Réseau des Sports (RDS). While Bell explained that the proposal would have taken advantage of CKAC's recent flip from all-sports in French to traffic radio in 2011, the switch was also necessary to maintain ownership of CKGM following the proposed Astral merger. Astral Media already owned the maximum of three English-language stations it can legally own in the Montreal market, as it has less than 8 English-language commercial stations.[16] [17] On October 18, 2012, the CRTC rejected Bell's proposal to acquire Astral Media. Since the application to convert CKGM into a French station was contingent on the approval of the Astral merger, it too was rejected by the CRTC.[18]

Prior to hearings in May 2013 regarding a modified proposal to acquire Astral Media, 15,000 listeners signed a petition issued by Bell in support of allowing the company to keep the station. Bell asserted that the CRTC could force CKGM to be sold or shut down if the company was not granted an exemption to the ownership cap. Bell proposed an exemption promising to keep CKGM as a sports radio station and invest $245,000 in local amateur sports and sports journalism scholarships for seven years. At the hearings however, the CRTC's commissioner noted that most of the comments on Bell's petition only supported CKGM maintaining a sports radio format and not Bell's purchase of Astral as a whole, and that the company could elect to sell a different station instead.[19][20] Rogers Media showed interest in making a "reasonable offer" to purchase CKGM if Bell were forced to divest the station; Rogers planned to put the station in its Sportsnet Radio chain, maintaining a sports format and complimenting the recently acquired City station CJNT-DT to increase its presence in Montreal. However, if this were to have occurred, CKGM would have lost its Canadiens radio rights because they are owned by Bell directly.[21] The CRTC ultimately approved Bell's deal and its exemptions for CKGM.[22]

After 45 years in the same building, CKGM relocated its studios to 1717 René-Lévesque Boulevard East to join the rest of the Bell Media cluster in Montreal in September 2013.

References

  1. 1 2 Bell Media Site - Bell Media Radio
  2. http://en.montrealalouettes.com/article/tsn-radio-690-becomes-the-new-home-of-the-alouettes
  3. http://www.montrealimpact.com/en
  4. "Marc Denis Bio". Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  5. Decision CRTC 90-72
  6. CHUM press release, March 9, 2001
  7. Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2011-571, September 7, 2011.
  8. Fagstein: "Clear Channel Cagematch: CKGM frequency change", November 3, 2011.
  9. 1 2 3 "Making waves: Montreal broadcasters in flux". The Gazette, August 11, 2012.
  10. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2011-721, November 21, 2011.
  11. Fagstein: "CRTC gives clear channels to TSN, Tietolman-Tétrault-Pancholy", November 21, 2011.
  12. The Gazette: "Two new AM radio stations approved for Montreal", November 22, 2011.
  13. TSN Radio in Montreal Moves to AM 690 on Tuesday
  14. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2013-648, December 4, 2013
  15. Bell Media Launches TSN RADIO in Montreal and Winnipeg
  16. "TSN Radio 990 to become a francophone station". Canadian Press. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  17. Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (2012-07-10). "Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2012-370 (item 2)". Retrieved 2012-07-10.
  18. "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2012-574". CRTC. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
  19. "TSN Radio 690 Montreal Thanks Listeners for Support". Broadcaster Magazine. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  20. "Bell resistant to CRTC's TSN 690 proposal". Montreal Gazette. Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  21. "Rogers tells CRTC it is willing to buy TSN 690". The Gazette. Archived from the original on 4 July 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  22. "CRTC approves Bell-Astral merger". CBC. Retrieved 5 July 2013.

External links

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