WAPI (AM)
WAPI (1070 kHz, "Talk 99-5, Birmingham's Real Talk") is a commercial AM radio station in Birmingham, Alabama. It is owned by Cumulus Media. Until going silent in 2025, it carried a news/talk format, simulcast with FM sister station 99.5 WZRR.[3] The studios and offices are on Goodwin Crest Drive in Homewood.[4] WAPI's transmitter site is located in Forestdale. Its daytime power is 50,000 watts, the maximum for AM stations permitted by the Federal Communications Commission, from a single non-directional tower.[5] Although it boasts the most powerful daytime signal in Alabama, WAPI does not travel as far as most other 50,000-watt stations due to the region's poor ground conductivity. It does, however, cover all of central Alabama during the day, and can be heard as far away as the Atlanta suburbs. At night, because AM 1070 is a clear channel frequency reserved for Class A KNX in Los Angeles, as well as the Canadian allocation for a 1070 kHz station at Moncton, New Brunswick (formerly occupied by CBA), and KYW in Philadelphia at adjacent AM 1060, WAPI cuts back power to 5,000 watts, using a directional two-tower array. WAPI also broadcasts using HD Radio technology.[6] ProgrammingWAPI and WZRR carried local talk shows during the day, but at night they ran nationally syndicated shows from co-owned Westwood One including The Mark Levin Show, America at Night with Rich Valdés and Red Eye Radio. Most hours began an update from ABC News Radio. The stations were also Central Alabama's radio home of Auburn Tigers athletics. HistoryWMAV and WSYThe Department of Commerce regulated radio stations in the United States from 1912 until the 1927 formation of the Federal Radio Commission. Originally there were no restrictions on which radio stations could make broadcasts intended for the general public. However, effective December 1, 1921, a regulation was adopted limiting broadcasting to stations operating under a Limited Commercial license that authorized operation on designated wavelengths of 360 meters (833 kHz) for "entertainment", and 485 meters (619 kHz) for "market and weather reports".[7] The station was first licensed, as WMAV, on October 3, 1922,[8][9] to the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (API) in Auburn (now Auburn University), for operation on both wavelengths. The call sign was randomly assigned from a sequential list. WMAV was the fourth broadcasting station licensed in Alabama. WSY was a station first licensed on March 29, 1922 to the Alabama Power Company in Birmingham,[10] as the state's second radio station. The call letters were randomly assigned, and the station adopted the slogan "We Serve You". Alabama Power decided to exit the radio business, and WSY was deleted on October 30, 1924.[11] WSY's former equipment was donated to API.[12] In November 1924, the call sign for WMAV in Auburn was changed to WSY.[13] The call letters were changed again in August 1925 to WAPI, standing for Alabama Polytechnic Institute.[14] WAPI and NBCOn November 11, 1928, with the implementation of the Federal Radio Commission's General Order 40, WAPI was assigned to 1140 kHz, sharing this frequency with KVOO in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1928, WAPI returned to Birmingham, in part due to the NBC Red Network's interest in affiliating with a station in Alabama's largest city. In 1929, ownership of the station was split among API, the University of Alabama, and the Alabama College for Women (now the University of Montevallo). The broadcast power was increased to 5,000 watts. In 1932, the colleges sold the station to a group of investors, doing business as "The Voice of Alabama". WAPI remained affiliated with NBC until 1940, when it became an affiliate of CBS Radio. Move to 1070![]() In March 1941, with the implementation of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement, WAPI moved to 1170 kHz. The next year it moved to its present frequency, 1070 kHz. On December 1, 1947, it launched an FM sister station, WAFM.[16] In 1949, WAPI launched the first television station in Alabama, WAFM-TV. The Birmingham News purchased WAPI and its FM and television sister stations in 1953, switching WAFM-TV's call letters to WABT and changing that station's affiliation to NBC the following year. The Newhouse chain bought The Birmingham News in 1956; two years later, it renamed WAFM and WABT as WAPI-FM and WAPI-TV to match the AM station. Newhouse sold off the broadcast outlets to separate owners in 1980, at which time the TV station acquired its current WVTM-TV call sign. WAPI-FM would eventually become WJOX-FM. Popular music and adult standards![]() In the 1950s, as network radio programming began to lose its importance due to television's popularity, WAPI evolved. It became a full service, middle-of-the-road station of popular music, news and sports, featuring several local call-in shows at night. By the mid-1970s, it was the only Birmingham AM adult contemporary radio station. In July 1983, WAPI changed to an adult standards format under the branding "Hit Parade". In January 1985, the station returned to its previous adult contemporary format. However, three months later, WAPI immediately returned to adult standards programming when crosstown rival WSGN (now WAGG) dropped that format. On January 1, 1996, WAPI became an all-news radio station. Over time, the station evolved into a mostly talk radio station. AM-FM simulcastsOn February 22, 2010, WWMM-FM (100.5) changed its call sign to WAPI-FM and dropped its former adult album alternative music format. The two stations began simulcasting for most of the day, with the FM side branded as the main station, calling itself "100 WAPI". However, on July 24, 2013, WAPI-FM changed its call letters to WJQX and flipped to a sports radio format, carrying ESPN Radio programs, as a sister station to WJOX and WJOX-FM. This left the news/talk format solely on the AM side once again for three years. On May 23, 2016, co-owned 99.5 WZRR dropped its country music format and began simulcasting with WAPI. However, WZRR is now branded as the main station. Both stations began calling themselves "Talk 99.5", with WAPI's existence only acknowledged during for legally mandated station identifications.[17] On March 10, 2025, WAPI went silent.[18] It was one of six Cumulus stations to close the weekend of March 7, as part of a larger shutdown of underperforming Cumulus stations.[19] See alsoReferences
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