"WATO and WGAP would work well as local stations for their COL. I haven't seen any listing for the Sweetwater/Loudon stations but those would be nice to get ahold of."
I disagree.
As far as I'm concerned, WGAP died in June, 2003 when the idiot manager who replaced Mike Beverly decided to create his "Network" (or as it later became known as "The NOTwork"). After the Plumleys sold the FM and the AM in late '98, nothing has ever been the same. 95.7 has undergone 10,000 format changes, and 1400 was slowly run into the ground. The name WGAP is synonymous with Glenn Morton news, Blount County High School sports, Swap N Shop, school lunch menus, Carl Wells and Ruthie Beaver, and good 'ole Country music. WGAP was Blount County's news and information leader for 50-something years. All of that's now gone. What's left? A shell that simulcasts sister station WKVL AM 850. Half the time 1400 isn't even on.
I'm afraid bringing WGAP back from the dead would be a lost cause. It's got signal limitations being on 1400 Khz especially at night. Not only that, it serves a county that that has lost its small town feel and is more or less an extension of Knoxville. Blount County is the one county in the Knoxville Metro where all of the Knoxville FM signals boom right into it's area. Not only that, much of WGAP's audience has literally died off.
With WGAP having been gone for the last 4 years for all practical purposes and the extreme amount of competition from the Knoxville stations, getting a 30-something year-old female who lives in west Maryville, drives a minivan with kids, and listens to "The Point" to listen to 1400 would never happen. On top of that, you've got a county that has been overrun with Big Box stores who don't buy local advertising.
I pity anybody who thinks he could bring WGAP it back to its glory days.
Here lies WGAP: August 1947-June 2003. May you rest in peace. :'(