Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

KWRM

KWRM
Broadcast areaGreater Los Angeles
Frequency1370 kHz (HD Radio)
BrandingiCiti Radio Los Angeles
Programming
FormatChinese News
Ownership
Owner
  • James Y. Su
  • (EDI Media Inc.)
History
First air date
1948
Former call signs
KREL (1948-74)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID39692
ClassB
Power950 watts Non-Directional Day 200 watts ND Night
Transmitter coordinates
33°52′52″N 117°32′33″W / 33.88111°N 117.54250°W / 33.88111; -117.54250
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websitewww.edimediainc.com/en/ge-radio-network/

KWRM (1370 kHz, iCiti Radio Los Angeles) is a commercial AM radio station that broadcasts a Chinese language News radio format. It is owned by James Y. Su, through licensee EDI Media, Inc. The station is licensed to Corona, California. The transmitter is located south of the Chino Airport.

History

Most of KWRM's programming is in Mandarin Chinese. However, there are some English-language shows, especially sports events and talk shows. Some Spanish-language shows also are heard.

KWRM is the current flagship station of the Orange County Flyers of the Golden Baseball League. In the past, the station has carried the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes California League baseball and the baseball and basketball teams of Cal State Fullerton, Cal State Long Beach, and UC Irvine.

In the 1980s the station was co-owned by Pat Boone and played syndicated content, Big Band format along with locally produced talk shows such as "Call the Chief" hosted by the station manager Pat Michaels and produced by Randall Vorisek. Some of this content simultaneously aired on 95.1 FM KQLH which was KWRM's sister station. The Corona station had a small production studio that produced these and that also produced content solely for KQLH. Early 1980's broadcasters included station manager Pat Michaels, program director Marlon Pailey, John Drapo and Randall Vorisek who also engineered for the live Sunday broadcasts in Spanish.

This station became time-brokered in the mid-1990s.

In the mid-2000s, KWRM was often referred to as "The Worm" covering high-school football programs that featured future NCAA and NFL stars, as well as collegiate and professional baseball. The Worm also carried the USC Trojans college football for several seasons. In the Summer of 2005, KWRM began producing several sport talk shows, including the show "Controversy." Controversy was hosted by then Assistant Sports Director Roman Valdez, along with Aaron Toller and Jaeson Zinke. All three doubled as play-by-play announcers on KWRM-produced and broadcast games.

WKRM Tower

In April 2020 the station filed an STA with the FCC to go silent while it seeks a new transmitter tower location. Its long-time towers erected adjacent to the 91/15 freeways interchange had been removed. An FCC record dated April 14, 2020 said the station is "licensed and silent.".[2] KWRM resumed broadcasting on October 6, 2024 from a new transmitter tower south of the Chino Airport.[3]

NEW Transmitter Site 2024: From Ish Pisher Facebook Post: One of the most unique new AM stations in the entire United States.... KWRM 1370AM Radio (Corona-Los Angeles) just went on the air utilizing a 100 foot tower with a new umbrella-skirt design, the creation of Ben Dawson (Hatfield & Dawson) and Dr. Bobby Cox (Kintronic). Located close to an (Chino) airport, the 100 foot height was a perfect reason to use the skirt (shown where it connects by way of the circles) and has given the station outstanding bandwidth and enhanced coverage from it's 1.1 kw days/ 240 nights over the Los Angeles-San Bernardino-Riverside metros.

Three engineers working together to get things set on the air, left Ashley Wallen, chief project engineer, Steven Lockwood, President, Hatfield & Dawson; and Bob Burnham transmitter site construction engineer.

Engineering Team

References