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WGAN

News/talk radio station in Portland, Maine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WGAN
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WGAN (560 AM) is an commercial radio station licensed to Portland, Maine. The station is owned by Saga Communications and it airs a news/talk radio format. The station calls itself "Newsradio WGAN AM 560 and FM 98.5" The studios and offices are on Western Avenue in South Portland, Maine.

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The station is also heard on a 250-watt FM translator, 98.5 W253DA, which allows listeners who prefer FM radio to hear WGAN in Portland and its close suburbs.[2] In addition, WGAN is heard on the HD2 subchannel of co-owned 93.1 WMGX. AM 560 broadcasts with 5,000 watts around the clock, covering much of Southern Maine and along the Maine Coast up to Rockland. The transmitter is near the Maine Turnpike off Warren Avenue in Portland.[3] WGAN is Maine's primary entry point station for the Emergency Alert System.

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Programming

WGAN begins each weekday with a local news and interview show, hosted by Matthew Gagnon. A financial show is heard in late mornings. The rest of the weekday schedule is made up of nationally syndicated conservative talk shows from Grace Curley, Boston-based Howie Carr, Mark Levin, CBS Eye on the World with John Batchelor, Coast to Coast AM with George Noory and This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal.[4]

On weekends, there are shows on money, health, home repair, technology, law, veterans and gardening. Weekend programs include The Larry Kudlow Show, The Lars Larson Show, Eye on Travel with Peter Greenberg. The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show, The Hugh Hewitt Show, Sundays with Walter Sterling and Rich DeMuro on Tech. Most hours begin with an update from CBS News Radio, followed by Maine news with local reporters.

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History

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WGAN's logo from July 2002 until May 27, 2014

WGAN was founded in 1938 by Guy Gannett Publishing, a past owner of the Portland Press Herald daily newspaper.[5] It was Portland's second radio station after 970 WCSH (now co-owned WZAN) which signed on in 1925. WGAN had its studios in the Columbia Hotel and originally broadcast on 640 kHz at 500 watts. It was a daytimer, required to go off the air at sunset in Los Angeles, because it shared AM 640 with Class I-A KFI, the dominant clear channel station.

WGAN was a CBS Network affiliate, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio". After the enactment of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) in 1941, WGAN moved to 560 kHz.[6] It got a power boost to 5,000 watts and could broadcast around the clock.

In 1954, WGAN gained a companion television station, WGAN-TV 13, and in 1967, a co-owned FM station, 102.9 WGAN-FM (now WBLM). When network programming moved from radio to television, WGAN began airing a full service, middle of the road format of popular music, news and sports.

Until the early 1980s, Gannett's Portland operations owned the major daily newspaper, the CBS television station, 102.9 WGAN-FM and 560 WGAN, two of the city's top radio stations. Channel 13 was later renamed WGME when WGAN-AM-FM were sold to Taylor Communications in 1983. In 1987, WGAN was sold by Taylor to Saga Communications, its present owner. Saga increased the talk programming and decreased the music shows, eventually evolving WGAN to a full time talk format.

On May 27, 2014, WGAN began simulcasting on FM translator W288CU 105.5 FM, via sister station WMGX's HD2 subchannel.[7]

On August 22, 2019, WGAN also began simulcasting on FM translator W253DA 98.5 FM.[8] With the new translator on 98.5, the 105.5 translator switched to an oldies format in the fall.

In March 2020, morning co-host Ken Altshuler was fired, followed in April with weekend morning host John McDonald's termination. Altshuler had been with WGAN for 18 years, and McDonald for 25.

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References

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