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| webcast = [http://www.fan560.com/common/gap_streamer.php Listen Live!]
| webcast = [http://www.fan560.com/common/gap_streamer.php Listen Live!]
| sister_stations = [[KBMX]], [[KKCB]], [[KLDJ]], [[WEBC]]
| sister_stations = [[KBMX]], [[KKCB]], [[KLDJ]], [[WEBC]]
| website = [http://www.fan560.com/ www.fan560.com]
| website = [http://www.webc560.com/ www.webc560.com]
| affiliations = [[ESPN Radio]]
| affiliations = [[ESPN Radio]]
| sister_stations = [[KBMX]], [[KKCB]], [[KLDJ]]
| sister_stations = [[KBMX]], [[KKCB]], [[KLDJ]]

Revision as of 15:13, 2 February 2009

WEBC
Broadcast areaDuluth-Superior
Frequency560 AM (kHz)
Branding560 ESPN
Programming
FormatCommercial; Sports
AffiliationsESPN Radio
Ownership
OwnerGapWest Broadcasting
KBMX, KKCB, KLDJ
History
Call sign meaning
Edwina & Barbara Clinton
Technical information
ClassB
Power5,000 watts
Links
WebcastListen Live!
Websitewww.webc560.com

WEBC (560 AM, "560 ESPN") is a radio station located in Duluth, Minnesota, airing programming from ESPN Radio is owned by Gap Broadcasting, who recently purchased WEBC along with 3 of its sister stations from Clear Channel Communications. WEBC primarily competes with KFAN affiliate KQDS 1490. ESPN 560 broadcasts Minnesota Vikings games.

History

WEBC is the oldest radio station in the Duluth-Superior market. It signed on in 1924 in Superior, using 50 Watts on AM 1240. Duluth studios were established in 1926 and the community of license was later changed to Duluth, though WEBC's transmitter has always remained on the Wisconsin side of the bridge. The station ended up on 560 in the mid 1950's after a series of upgrades and frequency changes.

Like most other stations in the "Golden Age of Radio", WEBC carried a general entertainment format as the local affiliate of the NBC Radio Network. In 1955, with radio losing listeners to TV, WEBC dropped NBC and adopted a hot new format -- Top 40. WEBC featured announcers such as Lance "Tac" Hammer, Lew Latto, and "Doctor" Don Rose, among many others.

WEBC was a top-rated station until the mid-1970's, when FM began to attract more listeners. Talk programming was added to the lineup and took over the entire schedule in 1990. The format was then changed to Sports in 2003 after a sale to Clear Channel, which syndicated the "FAN" radio network to a number of its stations in the region.