KWTO

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

KWTO
City of license Springfield, Missouri
Broadcast area Springfield
Slogan "News/Talk 560" (AM) and "Jock 98.7" (FM)
Frequency 560 kHz AM and 98.7 MHz FM
Format Talk radio (AM) and Sports Talk (FM)
Power 5,000 Watts on AM during the day, 4000 Watts on AM at night, and 96,000 Watts on FM
Class C1
Transmitter Coordinates 37°04′06″N 93°18′31″W / 37.06833, -93.30861
Owner Meyer Communications
Website newstalk560.com (AM) and jock987.net (FM)

KWTO refers to two radio stations in Springfield, Missouri, USA. On AM, KWTO can be found at 560 kHz, where it airs a news/talk format. On FM, KWTO operates at 98.7 MHz and carries a Sports Talk format. The station is currently owned by Meyer Communications, making it and KTXR the only radio stations in the Springfield market to be locally owned and operated.

[edit] KWTO-AM

KWTO was founded by Ralph Foster and first began broadcasting on December 25, 1933. Ralph applied for and got the call letters KWTO, which stood for "Keep Watching The Ozarks". In the beginning, since FCC rules at the time prohibited the playing of recorded music on the air, the station had their own live bands that played on the air. During the 1950's, KWTO played a key role in launching the careers of stars such as Brenda Lee, Porter Wagoner, Chet Atkins, and The Carter Family, all of whom were regulars on the station before finding fame and fortune in Nashville. KWTO was also the radio home of regional stars, such as Slim Wilson, The Goodwill Family, and the Tall Timber Trio.

In 1959, after the FCC ban on playing recorded music on the air was lifted, KWTO broke with tradition and began playing country records on the air, and for the next 30 years, KWTO became known as "Country 56". On October 22, 1990, KWTO broke with its long-standing country format and became the Ozarks' first full-time News/Talk radio station, which carries the programs of several prominent talk-show hosts, such as Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Laura Schlessinger, Jim Bohannon, and female computer guru Kim Komando.

[edit] KWTO-FM

KWTO-FM went on the air in November of 1972 at 98.7 FM with a rock format and was known around the Ozarks as "Rock 99". This format lasted well into the 1980's until rival station KXUS went on the air in April of 1985 with a similar format. In March of 1987, the station adopted more of a Top-40 format, changed its call letters to KKHT, and became "99 Hit FM". This format was changed again in 1991, when they went to a soft-rock format and renamed themselves "The Heart -- 98.7 FM". In 1993, they returned to their classic rock roots with "Classic Rock 99 FM" and stayed with that format until 2001, when they went to their current all-sports format and became known as "The Jock, 98.7 FM".

[edit] External links