iHeartMedia operates the country's largest syndication service,
Premiere Networks. In addition, iHeartMedia syndicates a number of its homegrown talk and music shows without the aid of Premiere. While Premiere actively sells its shows to stations, the non-Premiere syndicated shows are often used as a cost-cutting measure and do not have a large sales staff. Those shows also do not carry network-wide advertising (unless distributed by a third party), and allow the affiliates to keep all local spots, which increases their appeal. These networks carry many program hosts of various political ideologies and distribute a variety of programs to both iHeartMedia-owned and non-iHeartMedia-owned stations. In addition to its own syndication network, iHeartMedia offers studio space and other services to the WestStar TalkRadio Network, which is based at iHeartMedia's studios in
Phoenix, Arizona. As a result, many WestStar programs are heard on iHeartMedia stations. Not all programming heard on iHeartMedia's radio stations are produced in house; however, most of iHeartMedia's stations share many similarities to each other in branding and programming.
iHeartRadio iHeartRadio is a free broadcast,
podcast and
streaming radio platform. It is also the national umbrella brand for iHeartMedia's radio network aggregating its over 860 local iHeartMedia radio stations across the
United States, as well as hundreds of other stations from various other media.
Alternative stations iHeartMedia Alternative Stations usually are branded as "Radio" (such as
Radio 94.5 (KMYT) in Temecula, CA) or "ALT" (
Alt 98.7 (KYSR) in Los Angeles). Others include: The Edge, The Buzz, The Project, Star, or X.
The Woody Show, which originates from KYSR, serves as the anchor morning show for the iHeartMedia Alternative outlets.
Hip-hop, Rap, R&B and rhythmic stations Stations that carry programming catering to black Americans are a big part of many iHeartMedia clusters, particularly Philadelphia, Chicago, and Detroit. In many clusters iHeartMedia has two or more such stations. About half of these stations focus on Rap and
Hip Hop along with younger
rhythm and blues sounds. The other half blend some younger rhythm and blues along with some Soul from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s along with some current product. In a cluster with multiple hip-hop, rap, R&B, and rhythmic stations owned by iHeartMedia, one is focused on Rap while the other is focused on Soul. Examples include Philadelphia, with
WUSL's focus on hip hop while
WDAS-FM focuses on Soul (in addition, the company also owns
WGCI-FM in Chicago, which focuses on rap, while
WVAZ is focused on Soul. iHeartMedia hip hop, rap, R&B, and rhythmic stations are branded as "Real" (
KRRL Los Angeles), "Beat" (
KQBT/Houston,
WBTP Tampa) or "Power" (
WWPR-FM New York City,
WUSL Philadelphia and
WHEN Syracuse). In San Francisco, iHeartMedia owned more hip hop, rap, R&B, and rhythmic stations such as Rhythmic Top 40 KYLD, rhythmic oldies
KISQ, and rhythmic contemporary
KMEL in that area (KYLD shifted to Top 40/CHR in 2015, KISQ flipped to AC in 2016), and the same happened in
Detroit, where the company also owns rhythmic AC
WMXD,
rhythmic contemporary WJLB and former Rhythmic AC WDTW-FM (now
WLLZ). iHeart also have hip hop, rap, R&B, and rhythmic outlets with heritage and familiarity based on the markets they serve, like
WHRK and
WDIA in Memphis, and
WKKV-FM in Milwaukee. Another growing format, Classic Hip-Hop/Throwback/Old School (consisting of R&B/Hip-Hop, Rap, and Rhythmic songs from the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s), can be heard full-time on iHeartRadio, as well as
KATZ-FM/St. Louis and
KUBT-HD2 in Honolulu. Previously, this format was originated as Rhythmic Oldies, which was launched at KCMG/Los Angeles and later spread to more markets before the former Clear Channel flipped several stations out of the format by the mid-2000s. For the Rhythmic Top 40 format, similar brandings include "The Beat" (
KUBT/Honolulu and
WBTT/Ft. Myers),
Power 102/El Paso,
104.5 Kiss FM/
Beaumont, Texas, "Jam'n" (
KXJM/Portland Oregon,
KSSX/San Diego, and
WJMN/Boston; a similar "Jammin'" is used at
WSTV/Roanoke &
WJJX/Lynchburg). A "B" has been used at
KBOS-FM/Fresno since the 1980s. Other Rhythmics, such as
KUBE/Seattle,
KDON-FM/Salinas-Monterey and
KGGI/Riverside-San Bernardino, simply use the call letters and/or frequency. Most of these stations target a multicultural audience and play Rhythmic Pop, R&B/Hip-Hop, and Dance tracks. For rhythmic AC stations, they used to have the "Party" branding (particularly during the time when most used
Wake Up with Whoopi out of
WKTU as their morning show), but the two "Party" stations in
Denver (
KDHT) and
Las Vegas (
KYMT, the former KPLV) have since exited the Rhythmic AC format. KDHT and KYMT moved to top 40, but continue to use the "Party" branding (KYMT is currently mainstream rock).
The Breakfast Club Morning Show out of
WWPR-FM in New York and "Big Boy's Neighborhood" out of KRRL in Los Angeles are iHeartMedia's syndicated urban morning shows. In 2017, for IHM's 3rd season they produced rhythmic AC programming.
Smooth jazz IHeartMedia syndicates the Smooth Jazz Network (aka Your Smooth Jazz), which is programmed by Broadcast Architecture. Unless otherwise noted, all Smooth Jazz Network stations will carry the following schedule:
Kenny G and Sandy Kovach in morning drive time, Miranda Wilson in midday, Allen Kepler in afternoon drive time, and Maria Lopez in evenings, with no disc jockeys overnight. Weekend programming consists of the
Smooth Jazz Top 20 with Allen Kepler, as well as the
Dave Koz Radio Show.
Dance and EDM The first radio programs included Electric Sound Stage,
Club Phusion, Trancid,
Pride Radio, PrototypeRadio, The Spin*Cycle and Classic Dance. Although they have no full-powered stations programming a Dance or EDM (Electronic Dance Music) format, iHeartMedia has FM translators and HD2 platforms broadcasting the EDM-intensive
Evolution platform (KZZP/Phoenix is the flagship station, serving as a reporter on
Billboard’s Dance/Mix Show Airplay panel), while the LGBT community is served by the more broader-based
Pride Radio (with WFLZ/Tampa serving as the flagship station as well as a Dance/Mix Show Airplay reporter). However, iHeartMedia's Top 40/CHR and Rhythmic Top 40 outlets incorporate a majority of Dance songs onto its playlist and set aside airtime blocks for mix shows. A weekly countdown program,
America’s Dance 30, airs on Evolution and selected iHeart Top 40 and Rhythmic stations.
Talk radio News/Talk stations News/talk stations owned by iHeartMedia often have a standard slate of hosts. The morning show is usually local, with other time slots filled by local and syndicated hosts. Talk shows heard on many iHeartMedia talk stations include
The Glenn Beck Radio Program (Beck having gotten his talk show start at iHeartMedia-owned
WFLA in
Tampa, which serves as its home station),
The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show (does not have a home station but is based in Nashville),
The Sean Hannity Show (based at
WOR in New York),
The Jesse Kelly Show (based at
KPRC Houston) and
Coast to Coast AM with George Noory, all of which are syndicated by
Premiere Networks.
The Mark Levin Show (based at
WABC in New York and
WMAL-FM in Washington, syndicated from
Westwood One) and
The Dave Ramsey Show (based in
Nashville and independently syndicated) are non-Premiere shows which air on several iHeartMedia stations. Before his death in 2021,
The Rush Limbaugh Show was almost universally carried on iHeartMedia stations in markets where the company has a news/talk station, including New York City: WOR was acquired in 2013 by Clear Channel and began carrying Limbaugh's program in 2014 following a long relationship with now-Red Apple Media-owned
WABC. In markets where iHeartMedia-owned news/talk stations are not highly rated (such as
Dallas and
Atlanta), iHeartMedia has chosen to sell popular syndicated shows such as
Coast to Coast AM and
Sean Hannity to rival talk stations. Syndicated morning news programs like
America in The Morning (from Westwood One) and ''
This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal (from Compass Media Networks) are also heard on a few iHeartMedia-owned stations. In markets where the local iHeartMedia news/talk station does not have its own local morning show, Armstrong & Getty from KSTE Sacramento and The Michael DelGiorno Show'' from
KLAC Nashville are often heard instead. While most of iHeartMedia's news/talk stations carry some combination of Beck, Hannity and Noory (of
Coast to Coast AM), this is not always the case. Some stations, particularly in the larger markets, fill their schedules with local hosts. In some cities, iHeartMedia owns two or three talk stations. The dominant station, such as
KFI Los Angeles,
KOA Denver,
WLW Cincinnati and
WHAS Louisville, broadcast a mostly local lineup. Secondary talk stations (
KEIB Los Angeles,
KDFD and
KHOW Denver,
WKRC Cincinnati and
WKJK Louisville) carry most of the syndicated offerings from Premiere Networks. Weekend programs heard on some iHeart-owned stations and syndicated by Premiere Networks to other talk stations include
At Home with Gary Sullivan,
Handel on the Law with Bill Handel,
The Weekend with Michael Brown,
In the Garden with Ron Wilson,
Rich on Tech with Rich DeMuro,
The Ben Ferguson Show,
Sunday Nights with Bill Cunningham,
Somewhere in Time with Art Bell and
The Jesus Christ Show with Neil Saavedra. Most are pre-recorded and offered to stations to air anytime on weekends they choose, although Ferguson and Cunningham do their shows live on Sunday evenings. Bell's show is made up of recorded
Coast to Coast AM programs from the late 1990s and early 2000s. He died in 2018. iHeartMedia has been active in the national trend of
simulcasting its AM news/talk outlets on full-power FM stations, hoping to preserve their long-term viability while AM radio declines. Examples include
Sacramento where KGBY 92.5 became
KFBK-FM, simulcasting
KFBK 1530 AM. In
Salt Lake City, 105.7 KTMY became
KNRS-FM, simulcasting
KNRS 570 AM. In the
Albany-
Schenectady-
Troy market, WHRL 103.1 became
WGY-FM, simulcasting
WGY 810 AM. In
Birmingham, WVVB 105.5 became
WERC-FM, simulcasting
WERC 960 AM. In
Syracuse, WPHR 106.9 became
WSYR-FM, simulcasting
WSYR 570 AM. Some iHeartMedia news/talk stations on the AM dial are also heard on low-power
FM translator stations. Even though they are powered at only a few hundred watts, the translators allow some listeners to hear WLAC Nashville, KOA Denver and WFLA Tampa on the FM dial. In Washington D.C., iHeartMedia has a translator-only news/talk station, known as "Freedom 104.7 FM". It is heard on an
HD Radio subchannel of
WMZQ-FM 98.7. That feeds translator station W284CQ which broadcasts on 104.7 MHz.
Progressive talk Progressive talk shows had been heard on a few of iHeartMedia's stations, primarily secondary to its main news/talk stations. These liberal-leaning stations usually featured at least one local host with some syndicated shows, mainly from
Westwood One, making up the balance of the broadcast day.
Air America Radio also aired on some of these stations. iHeartMedia has shown a tendency to drop liberal talk affiliations due to lack of ratings or advertiser support and replace it with sports talk or other formats. For instance,
WCKY Cincinnati,
KLSD San Diego,
WXKS Boston,
KPOJ Portland and
WINZ Miami had progressive talk formats that were switched to sports. In one case this caused a listener protest when iHeartMedia (then Clear Channel) wanted to change
WXXM in
Madison, Wisconsin, to a sports format. The outcry worked temporarily. WXXM was allowed to keep its liberal-leaning talk format for a few more years. But in November 2016, due to a general lack of syndicated progressive talk programming, WXXM flipped to
classic hits.
All-News In the
all-news radio format, iHeartMedia owns one station that airs continuous locally anchored news around the clock, except for a few hours of talk in the evening,
WBZ Boston. A few iHeartMedia stations carry all-news in
drive time, such as
KFBK Sacramento,
KOA Denver and
KOGO San Diego. For syndication and on the iHeart app, the company operates the
24/7 News channel through its Total Traffic and Weather Network division. From 2016, the service has co-branded as NBC News Radio after iHeart/TTWN and NBC News formed a brand licensing and content agreement.
Black Information Network On June 30, 2020, iHeartMedia announced a new all-news radio brand, the
Black Information Network (BIN), which is targeted towards
African Americans. BIN is heard on iHeartMedia stations in dozens of cities.
WBIN Atlanta is considered the flagship station.
Sports talk stations Nearly all sports talk stations owned by iHeartMedia are affiliated with
Fox Sports Radio. A few sports talk stations owned by iHeartMedia run programming from rival
ESPN Radio. In Cincinnati, iHeart owns two sports stations with
WSAI running Fox Sports and
WCKY carrying ESPN. In 2020, iHeartMedia launched the iHeartSports Network.
Adult standards Most of iHeartMedia's
adult standards stations were turnkey operations, running a direct feed of a satellite format such as
Westwood One's
America's Best Music or
Music of Your Life, with no local DJs. The company sold off many of these stations or flipped them to sports or talk formats.
Adult contemporary iHeartMedia's
Adult contemporary stations are often branded as "Lite FM" (e.g.
WLTW New York and
WLIT-FM Chicago) or "Sunny" (
KODA Houston and
KTSM-FM El Paso). A handful of stations use "Magic", "B" or something else similar as their identifiers. As of 2018, "The Breeze" brought a resurgence in
Soft AC, targeted towards millennial listeners. In the evening, many iHeartMedia AC stations carry
Delilah, a call-in and request show syndicated by Premiere Networks and hosted by Delilah Rene. In some markets, another station has the rights to
Delilah, in which case
The John Tesh Radio Show is often carried in the evening.
Your Weekend with Jim Brickman and
The Ellen K Weekend Show are popular weekend syndicated programs on iHeartMedia adult contemporary stations. Nearly all iHeartMedia AC stations switch to all-
Christmas music for much of November and December. Some AC stations are known for playing holiday songs as early as November 1 such as
WLIT-FM Chicago. Other iHeartMedia AC stations make the switch each year in early November while WLTW New York waits until the Friday before
Thanksgiving.
Hot adult contemporary stations are usually branded as "Mix" (
WMMX Dayton), "Star" (
KMYI San Diego) or "MYfm" (
KBIG Los Angeles). Some Hot AC stations lean toward
modern rock while others lean toward
adult hits.
Contemporary hit radio iHeartMedia's CHR stations share a number of common brands, including "
KISS-FM" (e.g.,
KIIS-FM Los Angeles,
WKSC-FM Chicago,
WAKS Cleveland,
WKFS Cincinnati,
WXKS-FM Boston), "Z" (e.g.,
WHTZ New York,
KKRZ Portland,
WZFT Baltimore,
KSLZ St. Louis), "Wild" (e.g.,
WLDI West Palm Beach,
KYLD San Francisco), "Power" (
WWPW Atlanta,
WGEX Albany, Georgia), Channel (e.g.,
WKQI Detroit,
KHTS-FM San Diego,
WCHD Dayton-Springfield), or "Hot" (e.g.,
WIHT in Washington, D.C.,
WWHT in Syracuse, NY). Other brands, less commonly used, includes "Radio Now" (previously used at
WNRW Louisville, now rebranded as "98.9 Kiss FM"), "Q" (
WIOQ Philadelphia-102.1 FM-Q102,
WQGA Waycross-Brunswick, Georgia-103.3 FM-103Q), "B" (
WAEB-FM B 104 Allentown-Reading PA 104.1 FM), "FM" (
WLAN-FM FM 97 96.9 FM Lancaster-Reading), "V" (
WVRT &
WVRZ V-97 Williamsport-Lock Haven, Pennsylvania), "Max" (
WHCY Max 106.3 Sussex), "K.C." (
WKCI-FM KC 101, 101.3 FM,
Hamden, Connecticut) and "X" (
WJMX-FM 103X, 103.3 FM
Cheraw, South Carolina). Although a majority of these stations features a broad-based, mass appeal music presentation, several stations like
KPRR El Paso and
WKTU New York program more
rhythmic material. WKTU has a sister station in
WHTZ, so WKTU's
playlist includes more rhythmic hits to differentiate itself from Z100.
Country music Country music stations owned by iHeartMedia often call themselves "The Bull" (
WUBL Atlanta and
KSD-FM St. Louis) and "Big" (
WSIX-FM Nashville) as national brandings. They almost universally carry
After Midnite with Granger Smith, a syndicated overnight program. Many also carry
The Bobby Bones Show in morning
drive time, based at WSIX-FM Nashville. (Some iHeartMedia country stations with popular local morning shows run Bobby Bones in the evening or weekends.) In 2015, iHeartMedia launched the iHeartCountry franchise, including the
iHeartRadio Country Festival. The Festival is a popular live music concert held each year and recorded for television.
Classic Hits/Oldies iHeartMedia's Classic Hits stations consists largely of FM stations with some AM stations. iHeartMedia uses brands such as "Big" and "Kool" on many of its stations. Nearly all of the FM stations play classic hits spanning from the late 1970s to the 1990s with a primary focus on the 1980s, with a 500-song active playlist. These stations generally have a few local live announcers; much of the time these stations are voicetracked either locally or from another market. Many air the in house syndicated 'The 80s Show' with Jeff Stevens on Saturday evenings and many air
Casey Kasem's
American Top 40 from the 1970s and 1980s. The AM oldies stations' playlists skew somewhat older and span from 1955 to about 1975. About 60 percent of the time they play 1964 to 1969 oldies, 20 percent pre 1964 oldies, and 20 percent music from the 1970s. Some of the AM stations also run adult standards several hours on the weekend as well as limited specialized programming focusing on the pre 1964 era. Most of the AM stations are in smaller markets.
Rock iHeartMedia stations programming a rock format tend to play a blend of new rock and harder classic rock. Some carry
Nights with Alice Cooper (out of
KSLX-FM in Phoenix) in the evenings while some others aired
Sixx Sense with Nikki Sixx until the show ended at the end of 2015. These stations tend to be live during the day and voicetracked at night. Some stations run
Rockline with
Bob Coburn and/or ''
Little Steven's Underground Garage'' as well. While iHeartMedia classic rock stations operate under a wide variety of monikers, many are branded as "The Fox" or "The Brew". Often, these stations will carry
Bob and Tom (out of
WFBQ in Indianapolis) in morning drive. In the
Southern United States,
John Boy and Billy (out of
WRFX in Charlotte) is carried instead in most cases. (Both of the aforementioned shows are syndicated by Premiere.) Other shows include ''
Rover's Morning Glory'' out of
WMMS in Cleveland. Starting with WQBW Milwaukee (now the sports formatted
WRNW) and WBWR Columbus (now
WXZX), several iHeartMedia stations have adopted a 1980s-centered classic rock approach called "The Brew". The company's
alternative rock stations use a standardized branding under the brand "Alt".
Spanish In a few markets, iHeartMedia has an FM station carrying Hispanic programming full-time. In some markets the format is a Contemporary Tropical format while in others the format carried is more of a Mexican format. In a few markets an iHeartMedia FM station carries a rap based Spanish format known as
Hurban, which blends Spanish dance music with rhythm and blues hits as well as some Hip Hop. The division was run by Spanish radio executive
Alfredo Alonso, who joined the company in September 2004 as senior vice president of Hispanic Radio. In September 2016, iHeartMedia brought hired Enrique Santos as chairman and chief creative officer of the newly formed iHeartLatino division. iHeartMedia launched an annual event franchise called
iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina.
Religious In a few markets, iHeartMedia has a religious station on the AM band. Some of these sell blocks of time to outside organizations and have no local shows at all except where local churches buy time. These are formatted similarly to
Salem Media stations. The other type of religious format iHeartMedia uses in a few markets is a
Gospel music based format. On these stations, Gospel Music appealing to black Americans airs most of the time, along with some block programming sold to religious groups. These stations are often programmed as urban stations that happen to be religious.
Specialties IHeartMedia has one station in
Hawaii,
KDNN/
Honolulu, programming a Contemporary Hawaiian Hits/Reggae format, along with an accompanying HD2 sub channel that features traditional Hawaiian music. Multicultural programming can also be heard on AM stations that iHeartMedia owns or has LMAs with. In March 2019, its
Allentown,
Pennsylvania outlet,
WSAN, launched an all-podcast format. In November 2019,
K256AS/
KUCD-HD2 in Honolulu launched a variant Top 40 format with a focus on
K-pop and other international pop hits. ==Criticism==