WBAP could refer to:
WBAP (820 AM) is a News/Talk radio station licensed to Fort Worth, Texas and serving the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. WBAP is a Clear-channel station, owned by Cumulus Media and broadcasting with 50,000 watts from a transmitter site in the northwest corner of Mansfield. Its nighttime signal can often be heard throughout the Southern, Central, and Midwestern states and Northern Mexico, while its daytime signal provides at least secondary coverage from Oklahoma City to Austin. The station's studios are located in the Victory Park district in Dallas just north of downtown. WBAP is one of the oldest radio stations in Texas, dating back to 1922, when stations in Texas were still getting call signs beginning with "W" instead of "K."
WBAP airs both local and nationally syndicated shows on weekdays. The day begins with the "WBAP Morning News" followed by Chris Salcedo from 9 to 11 a.m. and Chris Krok from 8 p.m. to Midnight. Most syndicated shows come from the co-owned Westwood One Network: Michael Savage, Mark Levin and Red Eye Radio. (The hosts of Red Eye Radio, Eric Harley and Gary McNamara, are based at WBAP.) From Premiere Networks WBAP carries Rush Limbaugh from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Weekends include shows on money, cars, home improvement, real estate and the outdoors. Brokered programming also airs. Most hours on weekdays start with local news at the top of the hour while nights and weekends, Westwood One national news is heard.
KTCK-FM (96.7 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to serve the community of Flower Mound, Texas. KTCK-FM, established in 1967 as KDSQ, is managed locally at 2221 East Lamar Blvd., Suite 300 in Arlington, and is currently owned by Cumulus Media. As of October 21, 2013, the station broadcasts a sports/talk radio format to the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex area as a simulcast of sister station KTCK "The Ticket" (1310 AM).
The station first started out as KDSQ in 1967 in the Sherman-Denison area on frequency 101.7 FM. Two years later, it changed its callsign to KSHN. Up until 1975, the format was unknown, then the call letters changed to KIKM-FM with a country music format during the day and Top 40 at night (simulcast from sister station KIKM), then to full-time Top 40 a couple years later. In 1983, the call sign changed to KZXL-FM, but two years later the previous call sign was re-established with a 24-hour country music format known as "Kick'm Country".