WBAM-FM (98.9 MHz "Bama Country 98.9") is a country music formatted radio station that serves the Montgomery Metropolitan Area, licensed to Montgomery, Alabama. The station is locally owned and operated by Bluewater Broadcasting Company, LLC. The station's transmitter is located in the town of Grady, Alabama. The station's studios are located on Wall St. in Midtown Montgomery. WBAM also participates in Montgomery rating survey by Arbitron (Market #150) and is monitored by Mediabase.
History
Circa 1960, the 98.9 frequency was home to easy listening-formatted WFMI.
Pre-Bama Country
WBAM was also known as "Oldies 98"; and then "Star 98.9", a Top 40 formatted station, in the late-1990s and early-2000s.
The birth of Bama Country
In April 2004 John Garrett announced on air, "he wanted to play an Alan Jackson record instead". That's when Bama Country was born. WBAM-FM has held on to its heritage call letters while returning to its roots as a country music formatted radio station. The station is still imaged on-air (although not exclusively) as "The Big BAM in Montgomery".
During the first three years as "Bama Country" the station put on a series of concerts known as "The Bama Country Birthday Bash" with many of today's top country music artists.
Bama Country Today
Since 2004, WBAM has broadcast a mainstream country format. The majority of the music played on WBAM tends to be newer and from more recent artists. Core artists include: Keith Urban, Brad Paisley, Toby Keith, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood, Lady Antebellum, Rascal Flatts, Jason Aldean, and more. Legendary artists and songs are reserved for a weekly show titled: Legends Saturday Night which is hosted by JR "Bubba" Cullpepper.
WBAM also features news and weather updates from CBS 8 WAKA, national news updates from Fox News Radio, and traffic from Montgomery Skywatch Traffic.
For several years the WBAM-FM transmitter broadcast from the 1,100-foot (340 m) Montgomery Tower Partnership behind the Eastdale Mall in Montgomery, Alabama. The antenna is a shared panel which still broadcasts several other local FM radio stations.
In March 2004, Deep South Broadcasting Co. (Bob Brennen, owner) reached an agreement to sell this station to Bluewater Broadcasting Company, LLC.[5] The sale was part of a multi-company four-station deal valued at a reported $15.3 million.[5] The deal was approved by the FCC on April 21, 2004, and the transaction was consummated on June 21, 2004.[6] At the time of the sale, WBAM-FM was broadcasting a Top 40 format.[5]
Awards and honors
Paul Simpkins, an original WBAM on-air personality from the time of the station's launch in 1953 until the sale in 1984, received a number of honors during his more than three decades with the station.[7] These include being named Sterling Magazine Personality of the Month and TV Radio Mirror Personality of the Month in 1967, 1968 and 1972. Simpkins was inducted into the Country Music DJ Hall of Fame in 1998.[7]
Cyril Brennan, the general manager and program director of WBAM, was named the 1976 "Program Director of the Year for Country Music" by Billboard magazine's International Radio Programming Forum.[8]
Popular culture
WBAM is name-checked with "This is country country on WBAM coming to you live, neighbor" in the poem "Pickup" by American poet Paul Allen.[9]
Alabama author Paul Hemphill included references to WBAM in his 1979 novel Long Gone as the preferred radio station of the protagonist, Jamie Weeks.[10] In 1987, Long Gone was made into a movie starring Dermot Mulroney by HBO Films.
History of call letters
The call letters WBAM were previously assigned to an FM station in New York City. That station's call letters were changed to WOR-FM June 13, 1948.[11]
References
^Nelson, Bob (2008-10-18). "Call Letter Origins". The Broadcast Archive. Archived from the original on 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
^ ab"Paul Simpkins". Country Music DJ and Radio Hall of Fame. Country Radio Broadcasters. Archived from the original on June 7, 2008. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
^"News and notes". Broadcast Engineering: The Technical Journal of the Broadcast-Communications Industry. Vol. 19. Intertec Publishing Corp. 1977. p. 77.
^Allen, Paul (1997). "Pickup". American Crawl: Poems. University of North Texas Press. ISBN1-57441-027-X. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
^Hemphill, Paul (1979). Long Gone: A Novel. Viking Press. p. 26. ISBN9780670437887. Jamie turned the dial of his portable radio to WBAM in Montgomery, with its endless wailing of Fats Domino and Elvis Presley, and the Platters, in an attempt to drown out the noise.
^"WBAM Now WOR-FM"(PDF). Broadcasting. June 14, 1948. Retrieved 18 December 2014.