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WOAI-AM

WOAI
WOAI logo.gif
City San Antonio, Texas
Broadcast area San Antonio, Texas and South Texas
Branding Newsradio 1200 WOAI
Slogan San Antonio's News, Traffic and Weather Station
Frequency 1200 kHz (also on HD Radio)
First air date September 25, 1922
Format News/Traffic/Weather/Information
Language(s) English
Power 50,000 watts
Class A
Facility ID 11952
Transmitter coordinates 29°30′7.6″N 98°7′43.7″W / 29.502111°N 98.128806°W / 29.502111; -98.128806
Callsign meaning World Of Agriculture Information
Affiliations Fox News Radio
Spurs Radio Network
Texas Longhorns Football
The Weather Channel
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(CC Licenses, LLC)
Sister stations KXXM, KAJA, KQXT-FM, KRPT, KZEP-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website http://woai.com

WOAI (1200 AM) is a San Antonio, Texas, news/talk formatted radio station operating with 50,000 watts non-directional day and night from a transmitter site near Marion, Texas. It is owned and operated by San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications, known as iHeartMedia, Inc. since September 2014, which acquired the station in 1975. WOAI is the flagship station for iHeartMedia. Its studios are located on Interstate 10 in Northwest San Antonio near Wonderland of the Americas Mall.

WOAI's local news operation features market veteran Jim Forsyth, Charity McCurdy, Cari Laque and Michael Board. Market legend Bob Guthrie, who was a WOAI news anchor for 52 years, retired in 2009.

WOAI's local programming includes San Antonio's First News with Charlie Parker and the Joe Pags Show.

WOAI is also the flagship station for the San Antonio Spurs radio network.

WOAI is known as the "50,000 Watt Blowtorch" of South Texas, because of its Class A, clear channel U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) classification. Like the handful of other clear-channel AM stations (not to be confused with WOAI's parent company Clear Channel Communications), WOAI can be heard all over North and Central America after sunset. In the daytime WOAI covers most of central and south Texas.

WOAI signed on the air in 1922 on 1190 kHz in San Antonio with only 500 watts. Over the next several years WOAI was issued permits by the FRC and, later, the FCC to move the transmitter site and increase its power from 500 to 1,000 watts; then to 2,000 watts, and then 5,000; and finally to 50,000 watts in 1930. In the 1930s WOAI's programming evolved from musical performances to news and agricultural information breaks in between soap operas.


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