City | Greensboro, North Carolina |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Piedmont Triad |
Slogan | The Light 1400 |
Frequency | 1400 kHz |
Repeater(s) | Translator W242CD 96.3 WPOL 1340 AM |
First air date | February 6, 1942 |
Format | Gospel music |
Power | 1000 Watts |
Class | C |
Transmitter coordinates | 36°04′N 79°48′W / 36.067°N 79.800°W |
Owner | Truth Broadcasting Corporation |
Sister stations | WPOL, WFMO |
Website | lightthetriad.com |
WKEW (1400 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station broadcasting a Gospel music radio format. Licensed to Greensboro, North Carolina, USA, the station is owned by Truth Broadcasting Corporation. In Greensboro and nearby communities, WKEW can also be heard on an FM translator at 96.3 MHz, for listeners who prefer FM radio. It is also simulcast on sister station 1340 kHz WPOL in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
It runs the Erica Campbell nationally syndicated morning show as well as other syndicated and local gospel and religious shows aimed at the African-American community.
WGBG ("We're Going to Beat Germany") signed on 10 months before the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, playing such artists as Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw.
Disc jockey Rick Dees began his career at WGBG, which was called "Top Gun Radio". Another student at Grimsley High School dared him to audition, and he succeeded.
Dusty Dunn began his 44-year career at WGBG "when The Beatles were the next big thing." In the early 1980s, he returned to the station (which was WKEW by that time) to do a four-hour morning talk show. Open Line, Greensboro's first talk show hosted by Ken Karns moved to WKEW in November 1986 when WBIG 1470 signed off.