WKJK

WKJK
City Louisville, Kentucky
Broadcast area Louisville metropolitan area
Branding Talkradio 1080
Frequency 1080 kHz(also on HD Radio)
First air date November 1948 (as WKLO)[1]
Format Talk radio
Power 10,000 watts day
1,000 watts night
Class B
Facility ID 55497
Transmitter coordinates 38°18′29.00″N 85°49′45.00″W / 38.3080556°N 85.8291667°W / 38.3080556; -85.8291667
Former callsigns WKLO (1948-1979)
WKJJ-AM (1979-1980)
WCII (1980-1993)
WWSN (1993)
WDJX (1993-1994)
WRES (1994-1995)
WHKW (1995-1996)
Affiliations Premiere Radio Networks
Westwood One Network
CBS Radio News
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(CC Licenses, LLC)
Sister stations WTFX-FM, WQMF (FM), WAMZ (FM), WNRW (FM), WLGX (FM), WKRD (AM), WHAS (AM)
Webcast Listen Live
Website talkradio1080.com

WKJK (1080 kHz) is an AM radio station broadcasting a talk radio format with some sports talk in middays. Licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, the station serves North-Central Kentucky and South-Central Indiana. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and features programming from iHeart subsidiary Premiere Radio Networks as well as Westwood One.[2] The station's studios are located in the Louisville neighborhood of Watterson Park and the transmitter site is off East Daisy Lane in New Albany, Indiana.[3]

WKJK broadcasts in HD.[4] Its daytime power is 10,000 watts. Because AM 1080 is a clear-channel frequency, WKJK must reduce power at night to 1000 watts to protect the Class A stations on 1080 kHz, KRLD Dallas and WTIC Hartford, Connecticut.

History

For most of its early years, the station was known as WKLO, owned by Dayton, Ohio-based Great Trails Broadcasting, which also owned several other Top 40 outlets, all of them in Ohio including WING, WIZE, WCOL (AM), WCOL-FM (also known as 92X WXGT throughout most of the 1980s) and WGTZ. WKLO provided competition to Louisville's main Top 40 station, WAKY-790 (now WKRD). In 1979, 1080 became WKJJ-AM, a 24/7 delayed broadcast of its FM sister WKJJ-FM (99.7 FM, now WDJX). Afterward, it became WCII with several formats, most notably country music, oldies and Christian music, before returning to a simulcast of its FM sister and their Top 40 format in September 1988 (though it would briefly break away for an all-news format). On June 24, 1991, the station was leased out to different operators and flipped to Christian talk. Six months later, on January 13, 1992, it flipped back to a simulcast of their FM sister. The station was assigned the call letters WWSN on May 15, 1993 (as part of a warehousing move to put the call letters on 107.7 FM after it signed on later in the year). By August, the AM would occasionally split from the simulcast to air some alternative rock programming. Several months later, on October 15, 1993, the station changed its call sign to WDJX-AM.[5] In September 1994, it would break away from the simulcast and flip back to all-news as "The News Resource", WRES. During this time, the station aired AP Radio News and Talknet programs. In July 1995, it flipped to classic country as "The Hawk", WHKW-AM, which was moved from 98.9 FM. It later became "KJ 1080", WKJK. On June 7, 1997, the station flipped to adult standards. It moved to a talk format in 1999.[6]

Programming

WKJK's weekday lineup is made up of mostly nationally syndicated programs. The schedule includes This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal, The Leach Report, Kentucky Sports Radio (two local programs dedicated to University of Kentucky sports), The Dave Ramsey Show, The Sean Hannity Show (both of which are broadcast on a delay), Joe Pags and America Now with Meghan McCain. Weekends feature shows on money, gardening, travel and computers, including syndicated shows from Kim Komando and Gary Sullivan.

As a sister station of 840 WHAS, WKJK is a secondary home for University of Kentucky sports, including women's basketball and baseball games. Most hours begin with national news from CBS Radio News.

References

External links


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