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WNNW

WNNW
WNNW-AM logo.png
City Lawrence, Massachusetts
Broadcast area Lawrence, Massachusetts
Branding Power 800 AM/102.9 FM
Slogan "¿Donde esta tu Música?" (Where is your Music?)
Frequency 800 kHz (also on HD Radio)
Translator(s) W275BH (102.9, Lawrence)
First air date August 1947
Format Spanish Tropical
Power 3000 watts (day)
244 watts (night)
Class B
Facility ID 14752
Transmitter coordinates 42°40′26″N 71°11′26″W / 42.67389°N 71.19056°W / 42.67389; -71.19056
Former callsigns WCCM, WNNM
Owner Costa-Eagle Radio Ventures, LP
Sister stations WCCM, WCEC, WMVX
Webcast Listen Live or
Listen Live
Website powerdeboston.com

WNNW (800 AM; "Power 800 AM/102.9 FM") is a radio station licensed to serve Lawrence, Massachusetts, United States. Established in 1947 as WCCM, the station is owned by Costa-Eagle Radio Ventures, LP, a partnership between Pat Costa and his chief investor, the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune. It airs a Spanish Tropical music format. The station is also heard on a translator at 102.9 FM, W275BH; this frequency is oriented to Lawrence and Lowell, while the AM signal is oriented to Boston.

The 800 kHz frequency in Lawrence first went on the air in August 1947 as the original home of WCCM, owned by Lawrence Broadcasting Company. An FM sister station, WGHJ (93.7 FM) was launched in April 1960 as a full-time simulcast of WCCM; three years later, the stations were sold to Curt Gowdy, who changed WGHJ's call letters to WCCM-FM that year, before fully separating 93.7 from the WCCM simulcast as WCGY in 1974. By then, WCCM had a middle-of-the-road format, with some talk and Spanish programming.

After Curt Gowdy sold WCGY (now WEEI-FM) to American Radio Systems in 1994, WCCM was put up for sale. However, a buyer was not found until 1997, when Costa-Eagle agreed to purchase the station. Soon after taking over a year later, Costa-Eagle shifted the station from adult standards to adult contemporary The following year, WCCM began marketing itself to the Lowell area, after WLLH (1400 AM) was sold and converted to Spanish-language programming; the station opened a Lowell studio, hired several former WLLH personalities (including news anchor Bob Ellis), and began carrying Lowell Spinners baseball, which had previously aired on WLLH. The station also began shifting back to standards, replacing satellite talk programming from Talk America with Music of Your Life a few months later. The Lowell studio was closed in 2002 after the station gradually phased out its use. WCCM also phased out much of its music programming in favor of increased talk programming, with local talk programming during the day and sports radio programming from ESPN Radio during evenings, nights, and weekends.


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