butchfm said:
But, thats not my question, this is....WGLI AM & FM BABYLON has not been on the air for a few years...for history go to
www.wackradio.com
Now there is a WGLI FM 98.7 ROCKIN' EAGLE IN MICHIGAN......with no am....if someone wanted to use WGLI am who would you call first....
You would go to the licensee of WGLI(FM) in Michigan.
Here's how this all works today:
As far as the actual issuance of callsigns, current FCC policy says that the licensee who has held the base call the longest controls other uses of that base call. So if I own WAAA(AM), which was licensed with those calls in 1956, and you want to put WAAA-FM on the air somewhere else, you need to get permission from me. And if there's also a WAAA-TV, which was sold off to a different owner in 1991, you still have to come to me at WAAA(AM).
There can be other factors that figure into this: if the owners of WAAA-TV included a contractual clause taking control of the base calls (as Disney did when it sold its ABC radio stations), then it would be up to the owners of WAAA-TV to decide whether you get to use WAAA-FM. That's essentially what happened in Knoxville: Citadel's LMA of 100.3 included a contractual clause giving Citadel control of the WNOX callsign - but when Citadel used its bankruptcy to walk away from the LMA contract, that apparently voided the callsign-control clause.
(There can also be, as in the case of WMIX, trademark issues involved. IANAL, but my understanding is that the FCC won't take those into account - so if MTM or its successors trademarked "WKRP," that won't stop the FCC from issuing you the WKRP callsign - but it could subject you to a lawsuit if you actively market your station as "WKRP" in a way that infringes the trademark.)
There's one more twist to this: in the case of WGLI, or WNBC, you can't simply use "WNBC" or "WGLI" as the callsign of your hypothetical AM station without another procedural step taking place. AM stations never have a suffix attached to their callsign. FM and TV stations can have a "-FM" or a "-TV" (or "-DT") suffix attached to their calls, but can also use a four-letter call without a suffix.
After NBC sold off its radio stations, it changed the callsign of "WNBC-TV" to simply "WNBC." And when the station in Michigan took its calls, it chose to be simply "WGLI," rather than "WGLI-FM." Those stations would have to change their calls to "WNBC-TV" and "WGLI-FM," respectively, before they could authorize you to use "WNBC" or "WGLI" as the callsign of your AM station.