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・ WSAJ (defunct)
・ WSAJ-FM
・ WSAK
・ WSAL
・ WSAN
・ WSAQ
・ WSAR
・ WSAT
・ WSAU
・ WSAU (AM)
・ WSAU-FM
・ WSAV-TV
・ WSAW-TV
・ WSAZ-TV
・ WSB
WSB (AM)
・ WSB-FM
・ WSB-TV
・ WSB-TV tower
・ WSB1
・ WSBA
・ WSBA (AM)
・ WSBB
・ WSBB (AM)
・ WSBB-FM
・ WSBC
・ WSBC (disambiguation)
・ WSBE-TV
・ WSBF-FM
・ WSBG


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WSB (AM) : ウィキペディア英語版
WSB (AM)

WSB (750 AM) — branded ''News 95.5 and AM750, WSB'' — is a commercial radio station licensed to Atlanta, Georgia broadcasting a news/talk format. The station transmits with 50,000 watts of nondirectional power day and night, enjoying clear-channel status on its broadcast frequency according to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) signatories with Canada and Mexico; this enables WSB to be heard across a wide coverage area during nighttime hours (sometimes extending across the east coast and Midwest of the United States).
It uses the slogan "Atlanta's news, weather, traffic, and Georgia Bulldogs station." The station is owned by, and is the AM flagship station for Cox Radio. WSB AM is the sister station to WSBB-FM 95.5, WSB-FM (B98.5FM), WALR-FM (Kiss 104.1), WSRV FM, (97-1 the River), WSB-TV 39 (2.1/2.2), and the ''Atlanta Journal-Constitution'' newspaper in metro Atlanta, all owned by Cox.
Although WSB is licensed for using the technology, it is not currently broadcasting in HD Radio. The digital radio system has apparently been turned off due to listener complaints of RF interference.〔(AM IBOC Stations on the Air )〕 WSB programming has been simulcast on sister FM station WSBB-FM 95.5 since August 2010.
The station's studios and offices are located at the WSB Television and Radio Group building on West Peachtree Street in Midtown Atlanta, which is shared with its television and radio partners. The AM transmitter and radiating tower are located in Tucker, Georgia seven miles northeast of Atlanta in the Northlake Tower Festival shopping center. The valuable land near the regional Northlake Mall was leased for the strip mall, in which every metal object used in the construction of the building had to be tied to an earth ground to prevent radio-frequency energy from energizing it like an antenna. These objects, including plumbing and ductwork, are technically part of the ground radial system. The radio tower itself is located in the middle of the parking lot, with stores to the east, west, and south.
==History==
The call-sign "WSB" carried an infamous history before it was assigned to a land-based broadcaster in Atlanta. In very early days of radio licensing, sea-based broadcasters were included in the call-sign assignment system. The first licensee of the call-sign "WSB" was the ''SS Francis H. Leggett''. After foundering off the Oregon coast on September 18, 1914, taking a toll of all but two of the 62 lives aboard,〔Lienhard, John H. ("The Francis H. Leggett," ) Engines of our Ingenuity. Jan. 31, 2014. Retrieved Sept. 19, 2014.〕 the call "WSB" was reassigned to the ''Firewood'', the name of which forms a grim coincidence with its fate: the ship burned off the coast of Peru on December 18, 1919, with 28 persons on board, all of whom were saved.〔http://earlyradiohistory.us/1928past.htm〕 Because superstitious seafarers objected to being issued a call "used by that ship which went down with all hands last month", "tainted" calls like "WSB" were quietly issued to unsinkable land stations.〔http://earlyradiohistory.us/3myst.htm〕
Originally on 740 kHz until the 1936 FCC bandplan, WSB was the fourth radio station in the South, behind the first AM station, WBT AM1110 in Charlotte, licensed in December, 1920... WNOX 990AM in Knoxville, Tennessee licensed in November, 1921... and WWL AM850 in New Orleans, licensed 13 days before WSB in March, 1922. They, among others, are all considered "clear channel" stations. That designation is given to frequencies on which only one or two stations are assigned to a frequency that allows full power transmission day and night. The WSB broadcast callsign stands for "Welcome South, Brother". Founded by the ''Atlanta Journal'' newspaper (once a competitor of the ''Atlanta Constitution'', now merged), the station began broadcasting on March 15, 1922, just a few days prior to ''Constitution''-owned WGM AM 710 (eventually swapped to WGST AM 640).〔(A Chronology of AM Radio Broadcasting (1900-1960) )〕 The station was only authorized to broadcast weather bulletins at first, receiving its full broadcast license later that year.
WSB smoothed the way for the radio spread of southern gospel, including through regular programming hosted by Charles Davis Tillman. The ''Shelby Star'' newspaper November 1985 issue wrote that the very talented Dan Hornsby, after the national disaster crash of the stock market, found himself working no longer for Columbia Records but for radio stations like WGST, WATL, & WCON along with being the first wake-up DJ for WSB radio in Atlanta. Lambdin Kay, the first general manager, called Hornsby "90% of the local talent on WSB".
In February 1924, Lambdin Kay called Art Gillham "The Whispering Pianist" while performing on WSB, a name he used in billing on Columbia Records, radio and theatre. Gillham returned to WSB in 1937 for regular programs. In 1927, WSB became an NBC Radio affiliate;〔(U. S. Network-Affiliated AM Radio Stations, 1949 )〕 in fact, the trademark three-tone NBC chimes were first played in the WSB studios. In 1939, the ''Journal'' newspaper and WSB radio station were sold to James Middleton Cox, the founder of what would become Cox Enterprises.
Wright Bryan, a WSB news reporter as well as managing editor of the ''Atlanta Journal'', was also a stringer for NBC during World War II. He was the first war correspondent to broadcast an eyewitness account of the D-Day invasion from London in the early hours of June 6, 1944.
Elmo Ellis, who programmed WSB in the 1950s and 1960s, is remembered fondly as an innovator among Southern broadcasters. He provided the on-air editorials for the station, and in the 1960s, consistently supported civil rights.
From 1925 to 1956, WSB radio, along with sisters WSB-FM 104.5 (now 98.5) and WSB-TV 8 (later 2), operated out of the top floor of the Atlanta Biltmore Hotel in lower Midtown. Afterward, the WSB stations broadcast from a Colonial-style mansion specially built for broadcasting, informally known as White Columns, also located in midtown, where Peachtree Street crosses West Peachtree Street near Ansley Park. In 1998, all of the Cox Radio stations located in the Atlanta radio market, as well as WSB-TV, moved into "Digital White Columns" on the same property, the original one being demolished afterward.
WSB formerly broadcast in AM stereo using the Motorola C-QUAM system during the 1980s, a period when music could still be heard on the station. The on-air talent in this era included morning hosts Russ Spooner and Dick Hamby, playing "middle of the road" music, and Skip Caray presenting morning sportscasts. However, as WSB's format progressed to a full-time news/talk radio format by 1987, the AM stereo system was turned off.
On August 16, 2010, WSB programming began to be simulcast on then-WBTS 95.5 FM, replacing the former rhythmic CHR format "95.5 The Beat." On October 1, 2010, WBTS-FM changed its call letters to WSBB. The move was made to allow it to be identified in station identifications as close to possible to 750 AM, but to also retain the calls of WSB-FM on 98.5.
===Sports programming===

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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