WSAI radio was established by the United States Playing Card Company in 1923, and originally transmitted broadcasts from their facilities on Beech Street in Norwood, Ohio. After the Reds' season ends, the games moved to WLW.On January 17, 2005, WCKY and WSAI swapped their call signs back to the original dial positions. Hear The Colin Cowherd Show, The Dan Patrick Show, Rich Eisen, local high school football coverage and more! 1923, June, WSAI goes on the air at the U.S. And, there is a lot more. As an all-network companion to sister station WCKY, which airs local talk during the day and carries various play-by-play, WSAI aired the entire ESPN Radio programming lineup. Ohio, was seen as the perfect location for WLW’s 50,000-watt transmitter. On Monday, July 2, 2007, WSAI switched to sports as "Cincinnati's ESPN 1360." WSAI is known as "Fox Sports 1360," and airs their entire schedule including The Dan Patrick Show, Rich Eisen, and Colin Cowherd. In January 2003, WSAI's Top 40 roots were revived as "Real Oldies 1530 WSAI" which featured some of the original WSAI "good guys" from that era such as Dusty Rhodes, Jack Stahl, Ted McAllister and Casey Piotrowski as well as longtime Cincinnati Oldies personalities "Dangerous" Dan Allen, Marty (with the party) Thompson and Tom "Cat" Michaels. Television cameras were the Eyes Of A Generation ; this is Television history the way they saw it. History. Z-93 was the FM Station at the time. It relaunched that day as "1360thesource.com," still carrying a talk format but heavily programmed with advice and consumer awareness-driven shows such as Clark Howard and Dr. Laura Schlessinger.That format lasted just six months, as WSAI went back to a sports format in July 2007. History Photograph of one of the five new studios comprising the eighth floor of the new Crosley Radio Company building in Cincinnati, serving WLW and WSAI radio (1930) 1360 AM retained its sports format with the traditional WSAI calls (albeit only mentioned at the top of the hour), while 1530 as WCKY switched formats from The "Homer" sports/talk format moved to WCKY at 1530 AM, while WSAI picked up the liberal/That format lasted just six months, as WSAI went back to a sports format in July 2007. Broadcasters Hall Of Fame induction ceremony http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1527972980220648955#The station ended up becoming Cincinnati's AM Top 40 powerhouse during the 1960s and 1970s, headed by personalities like Larry Gordon (America's Youngest Disk Jockey), Jim Scott, Ted McAllister, Jack Stahl, Larry Clark, Gary Allyn, Steve Kirk (later of WING, Dayton), Bob Harper, Mark Edwards, Dick Wagner, Bob Wayne, Steve Young, Bob White, Paul Purtan, PURTAN AIR CHECK 1966 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cl5RRCOXXVo1966 Ron "King B" Britain (later of WCFL Chicago) and the station's youngest DJ Michael Owens. Crosley Broadcasting, owners of WLW-AM in Cincinnati, bought WSAI because its original transmitter site in Mason. As an all-network companion to sister station WCKY, which airs local talk during the day and carries various play-by-play, WSAI aired the entire WSAI is known as "Fox Sports 1360," and airs their entire schedule including WSAI featured Cincinnati's largest radio news staff headed by National Broadcasters Hall Of Fame inductee The station ended up becoming Cincinnati's AM Top 40 powerhouse during the 1960s and 1970s, headed by personalities like Larry Gordon (America's Youngest Disk Jockey), Jim Scott, Robin Mitchell, Bob Goode, Buddy Baron, Roy Cooper, Ted McAllister, Jack Stahl, Dusty Rhodes, Casey Piotrowski, Larry Clark, Gary Allyn, Steve Kirk (later of On March 23, 1987, WWNK-AM dropped the simulcast of WWNK-FM and became oldies as "K-Rock."