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W241CH Latitude and Longitude:

39°55′02″N 75°13′18″W / 39.91722°N 75.22167°W / 39.91722; -75.22167
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(Redirected from W241CH)
WURD
Broadcast area Delaware Valley
Frequency900 kHz
Programming
Format Urban talk
Ownership
OwnerLEVAS Communications, LP
History
First air date
1958
Former call signs
WFLN (1958-1985)
WDVT (1985-1988)
WFLN (1988-1989)
WURD (1989-1999)
WEMG (1999-2001)
Call sign meaning
WURD = Word
Technical information [1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID52442
ClassD
Power1,000 watts day
105 watts night
Translator(s)96.1 W241CH (Philadelphia)
Links
Public license information
Website 900amwurd.com

WURD (900 AM) is a radio station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It broadcasts an urban talk format, and is currently under the ownership of LEVAS Communications, LP. It is also heard via FM translator W241CH on 96.1 MHz.

History

The station began operations around 1958 as WFLN, serving as a daytime-only AM simulcast of classical station WFLN-FM.

In the early 1980s, the station was sold to veteran Philadelphia broadcaster Frank Ford, who changed the callsign to WDVT, and changed the format to talk. Weekday talk show hosts on WDVT included Peter Tilden, Philadelphia Magazine writer Carol Saline, former Philadelphia Bulletin columnist D.I. Strunk and Ford himself. Weekend specialty shows on the station covered subjects ranging from pro wrestling to gay issues.

WDVT made little impact in the ratings, and after a few years, Ford took the station off the air and returned its license to the owners of WFLN, who sold it to Willis Broadcasting, a Virginia-based religious broadcaster who changed the call letters to WURD.

In 1996, Spanish broadcaster Alfredo Alonso bought the station for $1.5 million and turned it into a Spanish-language operation as WEMG, "Mega 900." The station became the first property purchased by Alonso, who founded Mega Broadcasting that same year. Eventually, Mega moved the WEMG call sign to 1310 kHz, and sold 900 AM for $8.5 million in 2002.

The new owner, Walter P. Lomax Jr., reinstituted the WURD call sign. After a period of apparent indecision during which the station aired various types of music and CNN Headline News, management settled on the current talk format.

External links


39°55′02″N 75°13′18″W / 39.91722°N 75.22167°W / 39.91722; -75.22167

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WURD". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.