(Redirected from KDKA AM)
'KDKA' is a
U.S. class A
clear channel AM radio station located in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that operates on 1020
kHz. The station is owned by
CBS Radio. Its transmitter is located in Allison Park, Pennsylvania.
KDKA is a news and
talk radio station. It broadcasts 24 hours per day with 50,000 watts using a non-directional antenna. Its signal can be heard in large parts of Pennsylvania,
Ohio and
West Virginia during the day--including
Youngstown,
Akron and
Cleveland. At night, it reaches much of the eastern half of North America. It is one of the few remaining stations east of the
Mississippi River that has
call letters beginning with ''K''.
History
KDKA started broadcasting on
November 2,
1920 as the first commercial radio station in the
United States. (The oldest non-commercial station is
WWV, which began operation in May of 1920). KDKA also claims to be the first commercial radio station broadcasting on a regular schedule. That claim is complicated by the fact that radio prior to 1920 was mostly experimental and good records are not kept for all "experimental" signals of contesting stations. Further, another radio station in North America,
XWA-AM in
Montréal,
Québec,
Canada (renamed CFCF on
November 4,
1920, and currently
CINW), began its commercial, regular broadcast programming schedule on
May 20,
1920 — nearly six months before KDKA aired its first regularly scheduled broadcast.
KDKA's roots began with the efforts of
Frank Conrad who operated KDKA's predecessor 75 watt '8XK' from the
Pittsburgh suburb of
Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania from 1916. Conrad's musical offerings proved unexpectedly popular and his operations continued until his employer, the
Westinghouse Electric Company, realized the potential of this new medium and applied for an official broadcasting license. The KDKA callsign was assigned sequentially from a list maintained for the use of US-registry maritime stations, and on
November 2,
1920, KDKA broadcast the
US presidential election returns from a shack located on the roof of a Westinghouse building in
East Pittsburgh. There is some indication that the new license had not been received by that date, and the station may have gone online with the experimental call sign of '8ZZ' that night. The original broadcast was said to be heard as far away as
Canada.
The radio station continued to broadcast from the Westinghouse building for many months. The station continued to get upgrades and increased range, and within five years received reception reports from as far away as
Australia and
Antarctica.
In the 1920s KDKA played popular music and in 1921 had the first broadcasts of major league professional baseball games. KDKA hosted political comedian
Will Rogers in his very first radio appearance in 1922. Advertisers began sponsoring special radio programs on KDKA like ''The
Philco Hour'', ''The
Maxwell House Hour'' and ''The
Wrigley Party''.
In 1930s, KDKA began the long-running (1932–1980) ''Uncle Ed Schaughency'' show. They carried up-to-the-minute coverage of the
St. Patrick's Day 1936 flood that buried downtown Pittsburgh under water all the way to Wood Street. KDKA also played popular big band and jazz music every morning as well as hosting the KDKA ''Farm Hour''. From 1941 to 1959, the ''Farm Hour'' was built around farm reports along with music by
Slim Bryant and his Wildcats, who eventually became the top local country music act in the Pittsburgh area.
In 1946, KDKA provided live coverage of the inauguration of
David L. Lawrence as Pittsburgh Mayor as well as presidential and governors' inaugurations. By the end of the decade the musical and comedy team of "Buzz & Bill", Buzz Aston and Bill Hinds aired.
In the 1950s, Uncle Ed turned his focus to news and a creative guy named
Rege Cordic found entertaining ways to wake up Pittsburgh radio listeners. The ''Cordic & Company'' morning show, featuring a team of bright and innovative people, gave birth to today's "morning team" radio format, but in an unconventional way. Cordic and his group played a bit of music, but mainly created on-air mayhem in the form of skits, recurring characters like "Louie The Garbageman" and space alien "Omicron." When Ed Schaughency did the news and read a commercial for a local bacon, a sound effect of frying usually ran as he sang the praises of the brand. One day Cordic substituted a sound effect recording of explosions. Schaughency barely kept his composure. Cordic's crew included Karl Hardman and
Bob Trow, later known for portraying "Bob Dog" on
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.
The 1950s saw a shift to local programming at KDKA as national radio shows were moving over to television.
Art Pallan and Bob Tracey became household names on the KDKA airwaves, playing the popular music of the day. For some years, announcer
Sterling Yates, also a musician, played hip, progressive jazz on a Sunday morning broadcast. On
January 1,
1951, a couple named Ed and Wendy King launched ''Party Line'', the first radio talk show. Phone lines were flooded with calls for Ed and Wendy King's "Party Line" program, for its 20-year run, which ended with Ed King's death on
November 18,
1971. In 1956, a young newsman, Bill Steinbach, began his 36 year career at KDKA. Within a few years, Steinbach was anchor of the award-winning 90-to-6, Pittsburgh's popular news program. KDKA gradually embraced rock and roll music with artists like
Bill Haley, the
Everly Brothers,
Fats Domino,
Elvis Presley, in addition to popular vocalists including
Frank Sinatra,
Perry Como,
Peggy Lee. By 1960 KDKA leaned toward rock and roll.
In the 1960s, KDKA was there for the highs and lows, from the Pirates'
1960 World Series win, to the tragic assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, and Sen. Robert Kennedy. As rock-and-roll swept the nation, "Your Pal" Pallan played the hit songs and KDKA carried the sounds of screaming crowds as the
Beatles arrived in Pittsburgh in 1964. The major exponent of rock on KDKA was disc jockey
Clark Race, who also hosted a local ''
American Bandstand''-like program on
KDKA-TV.Other artists heard included
Four Seasons,
The Vogues,
Lou Christie, (the latter two Pittsburgh-bred),
Beach Boys,
The Hollies,
Supremes,
Four Tops,
The Turtles, and others. After 11 years of waking Pittsburghers with laughter,
Rege Cordic moved onto new opportunities in Los Angeles. In 1968, Jack Bogut was named the KDKA morning host, a position he held for 15 years. One of Bogut's most memorable contributions to KDKA was his coining of the whimsical word "Farkleberry", which is now a staple of the annual Children's Hospital campaign.
By the early 1970s, KDKA moved to more of an adult contemporary sound mixing the rock and roll hits of the 1960s with what was then today's soft rock. Artists like
America,
Carpenters,
Doobie Brothers,
Paul Simon,
Dawn,
Neil Diamond, and others became core artists. The 6 to 9 am and the 4 to 7 pm slots added more news and features and music was cut to about 4 to 6 songs per hour. The station kept about 12 songs an hour during the 9 am to 4 pm daypart. In 1973, KDKA added an evening talk show from 9 pm to midnight weeknights. John Cigna became the talk show host and urged listeners to "buy American!" Meanwhile, in 1974, KDKA added overnight talk programming with Perry Marshall which was known as the "Marshall's Office". In 1975, KDKA became a talk station nearly 12 hours a day from 6 pm to 6 am weeknights when Roy Fox signed on as the 6 to 9 pm talk host. Music continued during the day with a lot of news and information mixed in. By now KDKA was considered a full service adult contemporary radio station.
In 1979, a newsman named Fred Honsberger joined the KDKA team and has gone onto host a successful evening talk show and now, his top-rated afternoon drive program. Also in 1979, KDKA covered the Three Mile Island nuclear accident, which was first reported by a young Harrisburg newsman named Mike Pintek. By 1982, Pintek joined the KDKA News staff and became one of KDKA's most popular talk hosts. He was fired at the end of 2005 in a programming overhaul.
On
July 23,
1982, KDKA became the world's first radio station to broadcast in AM stereo.
[1] KDKA's commitment to news and information remained as strong as ever. KDKA kept listeners up-to-the minute on stories like the 1986 Space Shuttle disaster, the
Iran Contra hearings, the deaths of
R. Budd Dwyer and Mayor
Richard Caliguiri and the big oil spill on the
Monongahela river. Through it all, KDKA Radio was the winner of four Joe Snyder awards for outstanding overall news service in the state of Pennsylvania, an honor bestowed by the
Associated Press. Throughout the 1980s KDKA continued an information and news intensive adult contemporary music format playing 4 to 6 songs per hours at drive times and about 10 to 12 songs an hour during middays and weekends. At night the station continued its talk format.
One of KDKA's biggest changes was in the 1990s. KDKA made the decision to build upon its strengths and switch from a full-service format, which includes music, to a news/talk format. The historic moment came in April of 1992, when Larry Richert played the last song aired as a regular part of KDKA Radio programming:
Don McLean's "American Pie." For many listeners, it was "the day the music died."
Rush Limbaugh was added to the noon to 3 pm slot. All news blocks were added in the 6 to 9 am and the 4 to 6 pm timeslots. KDKA also offered extensive coverage of the 1991
Gulf War and the crash of
USAir Flight 427 in September, 1994. Bob Logue took over the midnight to 5 AM time slot and called his program "The Undercover Club." Although he is retired, the program name still remains.
Westinghouse would merge with CBS at the start of 1996, so KDKA became a CBS owned-and-operated station.
Viacom later bought CBS, and KDKA-AM is now part of
CBS Radio.
In September, 2001, KDKA offered listeners "wall-to-wall" coverage of the attacks on America and provided the KDKA airwaves to listeners who felt the need to talk about this.
On
October 1,
2006 after 52 seasons, KDKA 1020 AM broadcast its final Pirates game. The Pirates won the game over the Reds 1-0.
On
April 26,
2007, the East Pittsburgh building that was the birthplace for KDKA was torn down to make way for an industrial complex.
Historical controversy
Although KDKA claims that it is "the pioneer broadcasting station of the world,"
[2] the issue is disputed. Contenders for initial broadcasts include:
★
Charles Herrold of
San Jose, California started broadcasting voices (as opposed to Morse Code) in 1909.
[3] He used several different call signs over time (FN, SJN, 6XF, and 6XE), but had to shut down during World War I. After the war, he started up again as 6XF/6XE. The station received a commercial license in 1921 and became KQW. The station broadcasts today as
KCBS.
★
Lee De Forest's
2XG in
Highbridge, New York began daily broadcasts in 1916.
[4] Like most experimental radio stations, however, it had to go off the air during World War I.
★
Harold J. Power's
1XE in
Medford Hillside, Massachusetts was an experimental station that started broadcasting in 1917. It had to go off the air during World War I, but started up again after the war, and began regular voice and music broadcasts in 1919. However, the station did not receive its commercial license, becoming
WGI, until 1922.
[5]
★
2XN from the
City College of New York
★
2ZK in
New Rochelle, New York
★
8MK in
Detroit, Michigan (now
WWJ) which has had regular scheduled broadcasts since August, 1920
★
WWV the U.S. Government time service, believed to have started 6 months before KDKA
★
XWA in
Montreal, Canada (now
CINW)
★ W2XQ, now
WRUC,
Union College,
Schenectady, NY
Ironically, due to various corporate mergers over the years, KDKA is now a sister station to the other two stations with the strongest claims to be the oldest surviving commercial station--KCBS and WWJ. Despite the common ownership, WWJ and KDKA both still claim to be the world's first commercial radio station. What is not in dispute is that KDKA was issued the first "limited commercial" license for a radio station in the United States. This also makes KDKA the longest continuously-used call letters of any commercial station.
Programming
KDKA is the area's predominant news talk radio station. Its program lineup includes hosts such as
Neal Boortz and
Bill O'Reilly, as well as local hosts such as
Fred Honsberger,
Marty Griffin and
Gary Dickson. The station carries several "total news hours" throughout the day. KDKA also has a local
Tradio program on weekends, one of the largest stations in the country to offer such a service.
External links
★
KDKA Radio
★
KDKA History
★
★
★
Google Maps Satellite View of KDKA (AM)'s Transmit Facility and Tower
References
1. KDKAradio.com, KDKA Firsts
2. http://www.kdkaradio.com/pages/15486.php
3. http://members.aol.com/jeff99500/first.html
4. http://earlyradiohistory.us/1917df.htm
5. http://www.bostonradio.org/essays/wgi.html
Melhuish, Martin. (1996).
Oh What a Feeling: A Vital History of Canadian Music. Kingston, ON, Quarry Press.