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WPHM
WPHM
WPHM logo updated 2022.jpg
Broadcast areaSt. Clair, Sanilac County
(Daytime)
(Nighttime)
Frequency1380 kHz
BrandingNews, Talk, and Sports 1380 WPHM
Programming
FormatNews/Talk/Sports
AffiliationsABC Radio
Bloomberg Radio
Brownfield Ag News
Compass Media Networks
Premiere Networks
Spartan Sports Network
Ownership
OwnerRadio First
History
First air date
December 6, 1947 (as WTTH)
Former call signs
WTTH (1947-1970)
Call sign meaning
Wonderful Port Huron, Michigan
Technical information
Facility ID25988
ClassB
Power5,000 watts
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewphm.net

WPHM (1380 AM) is a news/talk/sports radio station licensed to Port Huron, Michigan, with a power output of 5,000 watts, covering much of The Thumb area of Michigan. The station is owned by Radio First and broadcasts from studios on Huron Avenue in Downtown Port Huron.[1]

WPHM's programming includes a live and local morning talk show hosted by Paul Miller from 6 to 10am with local news from Caleb Gordon. The remainder of the station's lineup consists of syndicated talk radio personalities and play-by-play sports. Most hours begin with national and international news from ABC Radio. WPHM is also an affiliate of Bloomberg Radio, Brownfield Ag News, the Michigan News Network, Michigan State Spartans, and all four Detroit professional sports teams.[2]

History

Early history: WTTH

For much of its early years, WPHM was known as WTTH, the original call letters standing for The Times Herald, the name of Port Huron's only daily newspaper. The newspaper operated the station from its debut in 1947 until 1970, when it was sold to Enterform, Inc (a name derived from the words ENTERtainment and inFORMation). The station continued to operate from the original WTTH studio location in the newspaper building after the sale to Enterform, which boasted a large front area originally used for performing live radio programs, and also which once hosted Paul Harvey doing his national news program at this remote location.

1380 becomes WPHM

Following its acquisition by Enterform in 1970, WTTH's call letters were changed to WPHM, to more accurately reflect the station's commitment to community service. In 1978, Enterform moved the studio to the newly remodeled and outfitted location at 2379 Military Street, and updated the studio-transmitter audio link from the old telephone line to a microwave system. In 1986, Enterform sold WPHM to Hanson Communications.

Though much of WPHM's history did not involve a co-owned FM station to enhance its profitability, it didn't need one. Somewhat unusual for a market this size was that two AM stations dominated the radio landscape, both with programming that included highly competitive news departments. Its advantage over longtime crosstown rival WHLS (a single tower 1000 watt "Local" station) was its powerful "Regional" signal of 5,000 watts, boasting seven towers (six-tower parallelogram daytime, 4 towers inline at night), able to reach listeners north of Port Huron, known as the Thumb area. For this reason, the station was billed for years as "The Big Station in Michigan's Thumb".

WPHM had maintained a longtime agreement with the ABC radio network and the Associated Press, which gave the station the tools it needed to be a strong local news competitor against WHLS and sister station WSAQ. It was that, a highly talented sales force, and longtime morning personality John Hill (who retired in 2002 before his death in 2012) that established WPHM as a force to be reckoned with in St. Clair County. WPHM was also the first in the market (even among its Detroit counterparts) to invest in hard-disk computer-based on-air technology in the early 1990s.

WPHM for decades now has used a jingle package originally produced for WABC in New York by JAM Creative Productions. "Information Radio 1380 WPHM" is sung in place of "News Talk Radio 77 WABC" during these jingles. WABC-themed news and weather beds are also utilized by WPHM, part of the original JAM creative package.

WPHM gains an FM sister: B96.9

Despite WPHM's success on its own, Hanson Communications still aspired to buy or build a local FM property. That opportunity finally presented itself in June 1992, when Hanson acquired CHR-formatted WBTI 96.9 FM, licensed to the city of Lexington, north of Port Huron. The station had been on the air for less than a year. The FCC approved the $350,000 sale to Hanson from Martz Communications a month later. WBTI was then moved to WPHM's offices at 2379 Military Street in Port Huron.

As further proof of how dominant WPHM was over its new FM sister, WPHM outbilled WBTI 10 to 1 in 1993.

Into the 1990s and the new millennium

In 1997, Hanson Communications began negotiations with David Barr, owner and president of Barr/Schremp Communications in Marine City, about 12 miles south of Port Huron. Barr, who was operating syndicated talk-formatted WIFN (now WHLX), wanted to leave the Detroit radio business and pursue other radio opportunities north of Detroit in Traverse City.

Hanson Communications purchased WIFN the following year and, after a brief period of simulcasting WIFN with WBTI, replaced its talk format with one of classic country, provided by ABC/SMN's "Real Country" satellite-based format in Dallas, increasing its portfolio to three stations. Hanson then vacated WIFN's (then WHYT-AM) studio from its co-located transmitter facility at 5300 Marine City Highway and moved programming operations to 2379 Military Street as well.

Lee Hanson died Thursday, November 12, 2015.[3]

Liggett and the creation of Radio First

In early 2000, Robert Liggett, owner of Big Boy Restaurants and former owner of several Central Michigan radio stations entered into an agreement to purchase Hanson Communications of Port Huron. Liggett also approached WPHM's crosstown competitor Wismer Broadcasting, whose owner and founder died in 1999. By the end of 2000, Liggett received all necessary FCC approvals to buy both Hanson Communications and Wismer Broadcasting. All five stations, including WPHM, became a part of Liggett Communications. For about a year WPHM continued to use the old Hanson studio at 2379 Military Street, which is now is home to a Coldwell Banker office and Hanson's Pro Music. Wismer's facilities at 808 Huron Avenue were expanded and now house the studios and offices for all five stations. 1380 WPHM, 96.9 WBTI, 107.1 WSAQ, 1590 WHLX, and 1450 WHLS are collectively known as Radio First.

WPHM goes all talk

Not long before WPHM changed hands, it gradually moved from its longtime format of adult contemporary and talk to all news and talk. WPHM was one of the first radio stations to pick up syndicated personality Sean Hannity in early 2002. Hannity started his national broadcast on ABC Radio Networks on September 10, 2001, one day before the September 11 attacks.

Morning personality John Hill retired from the station in August 2002 upon completing 35 years of service. Hill later died in 2012.[4] Taking his place would be Paul Miller who started his radio career in Port Huron at WPHM before leaving for other markets. Paul Miller was hired as morning show host in late 2002 and continues to serve the station morning show host weekdays 6 to 10am.

Other conservative personalities heard on WPHM during the first decade of the 21st century included Mike Gallagher, Glenn Beck, Dave Ramsey, Bruce Williams, Steve Malzberg and Dennis Miller. For a short period WPHM also carried ESPN Radio nights and weekends. Longtime apolitical fixtures of WPHM's programming were psychologist Dr. Joy Browne and overnight personality Joey Reynolds. Both were distributed by the WOR Radio Network until it folded in 2012, causing WPHM to replace Dr. Joy Browne with Dennis Miller in the afternoons and Joey Reynolds with Coast to Coast AM overnights.

Flip to sports-talk

Starting in January 2015, WPHM started airing NBC Sports Radio on the weekends, becoming an affiliate of Westwood One's newest sports talk brand. As a part of the format change, the Noon and 6pm "Information Hours", a longtime fixture on WPHM featuring local news and talk segments, were removed from the station's lineup. Other personalities such as Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, and Dave Ramsey were shuffled around however ultimately dropped in favor of NBC Sports.

Sports Director Dennis Stuckey was given his own talk show in January 2015 immediately following the WPHM Morning Show from 10am to noon weekdays. In fall of 2016, the program moved to 3 to 5pm. Stuckey's show was again moved to 5pm starting January 22, 2018.[5] As of September 2022, Stuckey was no longer with Radio First and had started his own local sports website.[6]

Back to news-talk

Longtime news director Bill Gilmer retired in August 2017, after nearly 40 years in broadcasting.[7] As of 2018, Caleb Gordon has assumed both news and programming duties for WPHM.[8]

In January 2018 the station dropped many of its sports-talk shows in favor of more news-talk programming.[9] Taking the place of the NBC Sports Radio weekdays would be Hugh Hewitt, The Tom Sullivan Show, and Dave Ramsey in addition to overnight show Coast to Coast AM. The station also begin positioning itself as News, Talk, and Sports 1380 WPHM.

Westwood One announced the discontinuation of NBC Sports Radio effective January 1, 2019. Additional news-talk programs were added in the place of sports-talk, including Markley and Van Camp and Our American Stories weeknights and SB Nation Radio on the weekends.[10] SB Nation Radio would later rebrand to SportsMap in 2020.

One of the longest running spoken word programs on WPHM abruptly came to an end in 2022 with the cancellation of First Light with Michael Toscano distributed by Westwood One.[11] Taking the early morning time slot in First Light's place would be This Morning with Gordon Deal from Compass Media Networks starting August 1.[12]

Also in 2022, WPHM revamped it's weekend lineup to add more specialty talk shows from Premiere Networks including Bill Handel, Leo Laporte, and Gary Sullivan. Michigan-based travel talk show Behind the Mitten also returned in August and the station also picked up the nationally syndicated Sterling on Sunday show.[13]

WPHM in the news

In August 2019, a comment made by a candidate for Marysville, Michigan city council during a "Meet the Candidates" forum hosted by WPHM made national and international news. Jean Cramer was asked about how to grow the city's population and stated she wished to, "Keep Marysville a white community as much as possible."[14] Audio of the exchange, which also included remarks about interracial marriage and immigrants was picked up by outlets including CNN,[15] Washington Post,[16] and New York Times.[17] Cramer would later end her campaign yet still earned 180 votes.[18]

In December 2020, delegates of the electoral college were to convene in the Michigan State Capitol to certify the presidential election in Michigan for Joseph Biden. 81st district State Representative Gary Eisen was interviewed on WPHM the morning of December 14 and vaguely described as a "Hail Mary" effort regarding a plan to prevent electors from casting a vote. When asked if he can assure the public that it will be a safe day in Lansing, and that nobody would get hurt, Eisen replied, "No. I don't know. Because what we're doing today is uncharted."[19] Eisen's comments made statewide and national news, being picked up by outlets such as the Detroit Free Press,[20] Detroit News,[21] and television stations including WILX[22] and CNBC.[23] Eisen would later be stripped of his committee assignments.[24]

Engineering

Originally WTTH was a 1000 watt station broadcasting at 1360 kHz daytime only from a site near 32nd Street and Dove Road in Port Huron Township.[25] The original construction permit was issued by the FCC on March 27, 1947. In December of that year, the station was granted extended hours of operation until 2am.

The frequency of WTTH changed September 7, 1949 to the present day 1380 kHz using a directional three tower antenna array at the Dove Road site. It would remain there until December 1961 when a construction permit was filed to move the station south to St. Clair Township with a seven tower array and a power boost to 5,000 watts. The Times Herald sold the station to Enterform in 1967 which was then followed by a call sign change to WPHM.[26]

WPHM-AM's current array is located south of the city of Marysville in Saint Clair Twp. off Range Road, located behind a Mobil gas station. The building housing the transmitter equipment is painted with the old WPHM logo. Through much of its early history, the transmitter building was staffed during hours of operation (at that time 6am to 11pm) by FCC licensed engineering personnel, which was a Federal Communications Commission requirement at that time for AM stations with complicated directional antenna systems. While there, the engineering staff would also perform other duties, such as set-up the long tape loops between two reel recorders to provide a "profanity delay" during call-in shows (before the advent of digital delay equipment), log exact times of commercial play to the program log, and take transmitter readings. The transmitter building was no longer staffed after the studio moved to Military Street in 1978, due to the installation of a new remote control system, and by that time, relaxed FCC rules regarding directional antenna system operator presence.

The seven-tower antenna system was more complicated than most AM stations, which required 24 miles (39 km) of #10 copper wire and over a mile of 4-inch-wide (100 mm) copper strap to be buried under the field as a "ground" system. The original transmitter was a Collins 21E, which was 3 connected cabinets approximately 10 feet wide, with the heavy power transformer located separately in the back room. This transmitter was 100% vacuum tube design. Then in 1980, a new, smaller, and more efficient Collins "Power Rock" transmitter was installed as the main, and the original 21E remained as the backup. The new transmitter was mostly solid-state design, with vacuum tubes in the power output section. Also by 1980, the microwave STL system had been upgraded to a stereo pair, partially for redundancy but also in preparation for AM Stereo broadcasting, which never fully materialized in the industry, and was not adopted by WPHM.

Chief engineering staff included George Carroll, from the WTTH days until his retirement in 1982 (d.1991), and David Huston from 1975 until 1987, who after the station's sale to Hanson, moved to northern Michigan to build a house and work with WAIR and WMJZ in Petoskey and Gaylord. Other part-time engineers worked at the transmitter building until the remote control was installed. Eric Hanson, son of Hanson Communications President Lee C. Hanson, served as chief engineer in the latter half of Hanson's ownership.

In 2007, the Collins "Power Rock" failed, causing WPHM to be off the air for nearly a week as a new solid state transmitter was ordered. A Harris Corporation 5 kW DAX was installed as the main transmitter for WPHM. The Collins 21E was scrapped to make room to the new transmitter. The Power Rock was later repaired and is on stand-by as the station's backup. Current engineering staff includes Craig Bowman and Sean Richardson.

References

  1. ^ "Contact Us".
  2. ^ "WPHM Schedule".
  3. ^ "Longtime radio man Lee Hanson dies of cancer".
  4. ^ http://www.michiguide.com/archives2012/2012/06/legendary-blue-water-area-broa.html[dead link]
  5. ^ "WPHM adds more news and talk for Port Huron".
  6. ^ "Not allowed to attend the game because of COVID-19? 'Get Stuck on Sports' is here to help".
  7. ^ "Bill Gilmer Retires After More than 20 Years at WPHM in Port Huron". 4 August 2017.
  8. ^ "Caleb Gordon".
  9. ^ "WPHM adds more news and talk for Port Huron".
  10. ^ https://www.facebook.com/plugins/post.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2FWPHMradio%2Fposts%2F10156792387846308[user-generated source]
  11. ^ "Westwood One Makes Distribution & Staff Cuts".
  12. ^ "This Morning with Gordon Deal".
  13. ^ "WPHM Schedule".
  14. ^ "Candidates say Marysville is a "welcoming city" after racial remark during forum".
  15. ^ "She wanted to keep a Michigan city white. Now she's dropped her bid for office". CNN. 26 August 2019.
  16. ^ Michael Brice-Saddler (2019-08-24). "This city wanted to be welcoming. Then a candidate vowed to 'keep Marysville a white community.'". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 1330888409.
  17. ^ Padilla, Mariel (27 August 2019). "Candidate Who Said Michigan City Should be Kept White Quits Council Race". The New York Times.
  18. ^ "Marysville voters favor incumbents, Cramer finishes last".
  19. ^ "December 14 Rep. Gary Eisen". www.wphm.net. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  20. ^ "Michigan House punishes GOP Rep. Gary Eisen for hinting at Electoral College disruption".
  21. ^ "Michigan GOP lawmaker who doubts safety around electors meeting loses committee assignments".
  22. ^ "GOP Rep. Gary Eisen clarifies controversial statements".
  23. ^ "Michigan GOP lawmaker loses committee posts after not ruling out violence during Electoral College vote". CNBC.
  24. ^ "Local lawmaker comments on electoral college protests, stripped of committee assignments".
  25. ^ https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=66080[bare URL PDF]
  26. ^ https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=66080[bare URL PDF]

External links


Coordinates: 42°51′50″N 82°29′40″W / 42.86389°N 82.49444°W / 42.86389; -82.49444

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=WPHM
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