(Redirected from CINW):'''XWA' redirects here. For the
computer game, see
X-Wing Alliance.''
'CINW' is an
English language Canadian radio station located in
Montreal,
Quebec.
Owned and operated by
Corus Entertainment, it broadcasts on 940
kHz with a power of 50,000
watts as a
clear channel (class A) station, using a slightly
directional antenna solely for the purpose of improving reception in downtown Montreal.
The station currently has a
news/talk format and identifies itself as "940 Montreal".
History
XWA, CFCF, CIQC
CINW started as XWA on
December 1,
1919. Experimental broadcasts continued from that date until the station began regular programming on
May 20,
1920. As such, it has a claim to being the first commercial broadcaster in the world, although other stations, most notably
KDKA and
WWJ, have made similar claims. Its
Call letters were changed to CFCF on November 4, 1920. While the meaning of that
call sign has never been officially confirmed, it is generally believed to be "Canada's First, Canada's Finest".
After numerous changes of
frequency, and a three-year period in which it shared time with
CKAC on 730 kHz from 1925 to 1928, CFCF landed on 600 kHz in 1933 and stayed on that frequency until 1999. The station was an affiliate of the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's
Dominion Network from
1944 to
1962.
Some of the notable personalities from the CFCF era include newsman
Gord Sinclair, morning hosts
Ted Blackman,
Al Boliska, sportscasters
John Robertson and
Dick Irvin, Jr. and 1960s
Rock and Roll DJ,
Dave Boxer.
CFCF changed its format from
full service to
Adult Standards in 1986. Call letters changed to CIQC in September 1991 as the station, and its FM sister
CFQR-FM, were sold to Mount Royal Broadcasting (later Métromédia), with the TV station keeping the
CFCF-TV callsign, and at the same time the station started an ill-fated
country music format, which lasted only until March 1993, at which point the station switched to news/talk programming with on-air personalities such as
civil rights advocate,
Howard Galganov.
During the 1997-99 period, CIQC was the home station of The Travel World Radio Show, hosted by veteran travel broadcasters Stephen Pickford and Willem Bagchus, which became the first Montreal radio show to be carried in US syndication when it was picked up in simulcast by the Westminster,MD-based Liberty Works Radio Network in August of 1999. The program was profiled in the October 15/2000 edition of L'Actualite magazine for its efforts in promoting Canadian and Quebec tourism to a US audience.
Move to 940-AM
CIQC received permission from the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to switch to 940 kHz, on a signal vacated by
CBC Radio One's CBM-AM (now known as
CBME-FM). With this move, the station would technically increase power from 10,000 watts (daytime) and 5,000 watts (nighttime) to 50,000 watts fulltime by June 1999, even though CBM-AM had the current 50,000 watt signal in use since 1978. These technical changes were implemented on
December 14,
1999, and call letters were changed at the same time to the current CINW, to match the new
all-news format introduced that same day.
The station initially wanted to use calls CKNN for its new format and frequency but was denied permission after they used illegally these call letters during testing on 940 kHz in the weeks preceding the frequency change. The 600 kHz transmitter was shut down on Easter Sunday 2000 (
April 23), after four months of
simulcast.
CINW ended its all-news format in September 2005 to pave the way for its current news/talk programming. The first day of the revamped format was September 14th, 2005. In a throwback to the CIQC days, the first live guest on CINW, at 0647ET with morningman Barry Morgan, was Stephen Pickford, who had hosted Travel World on CIQC from 1997 to 1999. Their most popular broadcasters in recent times have been
Joe Cannon,
Jim Duff and
Charles Adler.
External links
★
940 Montreal (official website)
★
Photo of DJ Dave Boxer with Paul McCartney and
Ringo Starr (1965)
See also
★
Oldest radio station