Maine Radio Stations Owned by Stephen King to go Permanently Off Air at End of Year

Tourists pose outside Stephen King's Bangor home in 2016.
Tourists pose outside Stephen King’s Bangor home in 2016.
Jennifer Mitchell/Maine Public file
1 min read
Share
Tourists pose outside Stephen King's Bangor home in 2016.
Tourists pose outside Stephen King’s Bangor home in 2016.
Jennifer Mitchell/Maine Public file
Maine Radio Stations Owned by Stephen King to go Permanently Off Air at End of Year
Copy

Three radio stations owned by author Stephen King since the early 1980s will go silent at the end of the year.

The stations, headquartered in Bangor and airing classic rock and adult alternative music, were acquired by King in 1983 when he was in his mid-30s. According to a press release by the stations’ parent company, they were never profitable, with King personally covering their revenue shortfalls.

The author, now 77, said in the release that his age prompted him to “get his business affairs in better order.”

“While radio across the country has been overtaken by giant corporate broadcasting groups, I’ve loved being a local, independent owner all these years,” King said. “I’ve loved the people who’ve gone to these stations every day and entertained folks, kept the equipment running, and given local advertisers a way to connect with their customers. Tabby and I are proud to have been a part of that for more than four decades.”

WZON, the three stations’ flagship, began broadcasting as WLBZ in 1926. After its purchase by King, its call letters were changed in a nod to his novel “The Dead Zone.”

WZON, WKIT and WZLO are expected to cease broadcasting on Dec. 31.

This story was originally published by Maine Public. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

Mayor calls historic investment in schools a win, but budget relies on state approval to exceed tax cap and avoid deep cuts
The Providence mayor is proposing to increase property taxes and other city revenue in order to fill the budget gap left by a settlement with the state over the city’s school department
A power struggle in the city’s troubled police department has blocked an interim chief from serving permanently, and cost her predecessor a job
Don Fox’s luxury sweater company faces soaring import costs due to Trump’s trade war with China — but in a Rhode Island town turning deep red, economic pain hasn’t shaken political faith
Consumers will have to wait until 2027 to see the results of the administration’s negotiations
Cranston Street Armory lands seven-month lease as production hub for untitled thriller; collaboration with Nicholas Sparks expected to create thousands of local jobs
Dropouts come days before meeting on SouthCoast Wind cable review