WAUK

"WYLO" redirects here. For the community in the United States, see Wylo, West Virginia.
WAUK
City Jackson, Wisconsin
Broadcast area Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Branding 540 ESPN
ESPN Wisconsin
Slogan All you really wanna hear is sports!
Frequency 540 kHz
First air date May 1, 1964 (1964-05-01)
Format Sports Talk
Power 400 watts
Class B
Facility ID 10824
Callsign meaning WAUKesha (city of license for the 1510 frequency)
Former callsigns WYLO, WZER, WRRD
Affiliations ESPN Radio
Owner Good Karma Brands
(Good Karma Brands)
Sister stations WRRD, WTLX
Webcast Listen Live
Website ESPNWisconsin.com

WAUK (540 AM ESPN) is a radio station licensed to the Washington County community of Jackson, Wisconsin, serving the Milwaukee area. It is known on-air as 540 ESPN. WAUK airs a blend of ESPN Radio talk and sports play-by play, along with local sports talk and play-by-play programming. The station's studios are based in "The Blue @ 310 West" building on West Wisconsin Avenue in downtown Milwaukee.

The station is owned by Beaver Dam-based Good Karma Brands[1] (formerly Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC), and owned by Craig Karmazin, son of legendary radio executive and current Sirius XM Radio CEO Mel Karmazin. It is the local rival of Entercom's all-sports station WSSP (1250), and to a lesser extent WOKY (920), which simulcasts Madison's WTSO (1070). Programming from WAUK is shared with WTLX (100.5) in Madison, which is its sister station to west in the state capital city. The station is among the few independent affiliates of ESPN Radio whose webstream is carried on the network's mobile apps, and whose website is hosted on ESPN.com.

History

The station signed on in 1964 with the call sign WYLO, which stood for "Way Low" (the station's position on the AM dial). WYLO ran a country format for many years before switching to Christian programming. From 1995 to 2001, the WZER call sign was used, prior to briefly returning to WYLO and finally, WRRD.

Prior to the sale to current owner Good Karma Broadcasting, Salem Communications owned the property and programmed a Christian-oriented religious format, though as WRRD, it never carried any of the talk personalities usually associated with Salem-owned stations. The station's now-former WRRD calls come from Salem's branding of the station, "The Word".

GKB took over operation of the signal on February 7, 2008, moving the format of the former WAUK (1510) from that daytime-limited signal to the full-time 24/7 signal of WRRD. Formerly, ESPN Radio was heard on WAUK during the day, and WMCS (1290) from 6pm-6am since January 1, 2005 under the branding Milwaukee's ESPN Radio - 1510 Days/1290 Nights. On February 12, 2008, WAUK's call letters were switched to the 540 frequency, with the WRRD calls moving to 1510.

The new "540 ESPN" simulcasts continued with 1510 AM[2] until May 5, 2008, when Good Karma converted the new WRRD to ESPN Deportes Radio, a Spanish language sports talk format.[3] WMCS's time brokering arrangement with WAUK ended on June 30, 2008, when the station reclaimed their nighttime hours for the music and community talk format the station aired the rest of the day[4] until a March 2013 format change to standards as WZTI.

Programming

Programming includes syndicated content from ESPN Radio, including Mike and Mike in the Morning, and "SVP & Russillo". WAUK also airs a good deal of locally-oriented programming from hosts Steve "The Homer" True, Jason Wilde, Bill Johnson, Drew Olson and Dan Needles. The station also features a weekly segment with Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

WAUK is the flagship of Marquette University Golden Eagles. The station also airs play-by-play coverage of Major League Baseball, the College Football Playoff and the NBA from ESPN Radio, along with the NFL and the college basketball Final Four from Westwood One.

Until 2011, the station had also been the Milwaukee home of NASCAR radio coverage from all three NASCAR radio networks, as well as the LTN Hour radio show since its inception in 1985 and the Racing Roundup show. On the November 27 edition of the LTN Hour, it was announced that WAUK would be dropping all racing programming by the end of 2011, with racing play-by-play acquired days later by Clear Channel's classic country station, WOKY (920), which eventually would go to a mixed format in January 2013 of sports talk from WTSO and Fox Sports and NBC Sports Radio programming. Clear Channel, currently known as iHeartMedia, gained the rights to Wisconsin Badgers sports for the Milwaukee market in 2014 for WAUK and WRIT-FM, usurping WAUK's limited role of airing football and basketball games pre-empted by WTMJ (620) due to rights conflicts, the full-time home of the Badgers men's hockey team.

The station also has had a branding alliance since September 2008 with WISN-TV (Channel 12), including a co-marketed spotlight high school sports "game of the week" (in men's basketball or football, depending on season) under Hearst's "Operation Football" high school sports branding, which airs live Friday evenings on WAUK. As part of this, a Saturday evening program called The Big 12 Sports Show with 540 ESPN hosted by Olson and Needles airs on WISN-TV before ABC primetime on that evening, which analyzes the next day's Packer game and acts as a post-game or pre-game for that day's Badger football game, along with coverage of other sports.[5]

Other local programming airs throughout the weekend, including an independent Wisconsin Badgers college football pregame show and a Packers-focused Sunday morning show hosted by Karmazin and former Green Bay Packers player Mark Chmura.

WAUK operates with only 400 watts, largely to protect the signal of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Saskatchewan station for CBC Radio One, and the former slot for their French station in Windsor, Ontario, both also carried on 540, though the signal does cover a relatively substantial area due to its low dial position. The Windsor station moved to 1550 on March 1, 2013, expanding WAUK's nighttime coverage in the area slightly in fringe areas.

See also

References

Coordinates: 43°20′00″N 88°09′10″W / 43.33333°N 88.15278°W / 43.33333; -88.15278

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