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NorthEast Radio Watch 4/10: It's Baseball Time
- Subject: NorthEast Radio Watch 4/10: It's Baseball Time
- From: fybush@world.std.com (Scott D Fybush)
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 01:40:20 -0400 (EDT)
*They call it "April," and yet it's all of 24 degrees outside - maybe this
Rochester thing wasn't such a great idea after all, weather-wise...anyway, on
with the week's news:
*We'll start this week in Massachusetts, where Glenn Ordway is out as program
director at all-sports WEEI (850). Ordway tells the Boston Globe the decision
was a mutual one, to allow him to focus on his on-air duties. Brad Murray takes
over PD reins at WEEI, in addition to his duties at sister talker WRKO (680).
Up in Gardner, meantime, little WGAW (1340) is about to be doing independent
programming for the first time in years. Doug Rowe kept WGAW when he sold
WSRO (1470) in Marlborough, and word has it that WGAW's program schedule
will soon include Red Sox baseball and other simulcasts from nearby WEIM
(1280) in Fitchburg.
More storm news: We're told WBPS (890) and WRPT (650) were also knocked
off the air during last week's big storm. WBZ (1030) broke format for a while
on Wednesday afternoon to take calls from listeners who were unhappy about the
slow state of snow removal. And with morning jocks Ken Shelton of WBOS and
Jack Brady of WOAZ stranded at home, overnighters Julie Devereaux and
Hillary Stevens got to stay on for the morning gigs at Greater Media's newest
stations.
And the Lowell National Historical Park's 1610 TIS is now running actual
information about events at the park...after two years with nothing but test
messages!
*A busy week in Connecticut, as Nutmeg State correspondent Marty Waters
checks in with this report:
WTIC (1080) in Hartford added Robin King as a featured part of
the morning-drive Ray Dunaway Show as of April 2. The news-talk format of
the program remains the same, as does its name, although Dunaway and King
said in an interview published in The Hartford Courant on April 9 that the
intention is to "lighten up" the program and broaden its demographic appeal
beyond the strongly male tilt it has now. The 33-year-old King, a 17-year
veteran of radio with eight years in the Hartford market, left her post
last fall as co-host of the "Ross and Robin" show on WKSS-FM (95.7)
whose strongest audience demographic is young women. She chose not to renew
her contract, preferring to spend some time at home with her 2-year-old
son, Kenny. The 47-year-old Dunaway has anchored the morning shift at
American Radio Systems' WTIC for the past five years.
Radio sources said last fall, according to the Courant, that WTIC
operations manager Bill Stairs, who made many staff and programming changes
before leaving the station in the fall, had arranged for King to team up
with Dunaway after her non-compete clause expired this spring. But King
said she left WKSS with no guarantee of any local radio job when she
decided to return to work. The Courant noted that King "suddenly appeared"
on the program with no advance promotion. She is quoted as saying she only
visited the station for discussions for the first time on the day before
she was on the air.
King said she had heard a rumor-which had no basis-that she would
be reunited with Gary Craig on the morning show on co-owned WTIC-FM. She
and Craig were co-hosts when Craig worked the morning shift at KISS 95.7
before he returned to WTIC-FM for his current, second stint there.
Traffic reporter Dennis Kennedy of WICC (600) in Bridgeport escaped
injury yesterday when his plane lost power and he glided to an emergency
landing at Sikorsky Airport in Stratford, which serves the Bridgeport area,
the station reported. Another staff member took over the traffic-reporting
duties for the remainder of morning drive time.
And in other Connecticut news:
The stations up in the state's northwest corner were hardly immune from last
week's big snowstorm. Dennis Jackson checked in from WQQQ (103.3 Sharon),
to report that the main generator at the station's transmitter site in
Millerton NY
failed, knocking both Q103 and WKZE-FM (98.1 Salisbury CT) off the air at the
height of the storm. WKZE-FM remained silent for three days, but Q103 was
back within 11 hours, thanks to station staffers who made supply runs up and
down Silver Mountain with fuel for a portable backup generator. Q103
immediately went into emergency mode, relaying information from listeners,
utilities, and town officials.
As for the 92.9 pirate mentioned last week, so far none of NERW's Connecticut
readers have actually heard it, although one reader notes that there's what
sounds like a Haitian pirate on 89.3 in the Norwalk area.
*New Hampshire news: It's the end of an era for independent TV in the Granite
State. WNDS (Channel 50) in Derry was officially transferred to Ramcast, Inc.
last Saturday, bringing with it a switch to Global Shopping Network
programming. Most of the station's staff, including well-known weatherman Al
Kaprelian, was laid off. WNDS had recently been improving its cable coverage
in the Boston market, and is now available to viewers in most of the metro
area -
for whom it's now at least the fourth all home-shopping signal on the UHF dial.
There could be a new AM signal in the Upper Valley area. Koor Broadcasting,
which owns WNTK AM-FM (1020 Newport/99.7 New London), is applying for
720 in Hanover. No word yet on facilities, but we'd suspect a few thousand
watts daytime, possibly directional to protect CKAC (730) in Montreal, and a
few watts at night. Apparently the plans for 720 in Billerica MA are now
completely dead and gone...
*One bit of news from Rhode Island this week: the long-awaited debut of
Providence's WB affiliate is now set for 5:30 PM on Sunday, April 13. WLWC
(Channel 28) is licensed to New Bedford MA and will be operated by NBC's
WJAR-TV (Channel 10). WLWC is owned by Fant Broadcasting, which has
similar LMA deals in other markets around the country.
*One bit of Maine news this week as well: Bangor's country "Bear" is finally
shedding the WWFX call letters that marked its old CHR "Fox" format. The
Belfast-licensed 104.7 outlet has applied to become WEBR, calls last seen in
Washington DC on the once-and-present WGAY-FM (99.5), and before that for
decades in Buffalo NY on what's now WNED AM-FM (970/94.5). By the way,
we've yet to hear from any NERW listeners who received the DX test a few
weeks ago from Presque Isle's WEGP (1390). Our tape here in Rochester turned
up mostly WLAN from Lancaster PA on the frequency, once WDCW in
Syracuse had signed off for the night. One more note: M Street reports Bangor's
WWBX (97.1) has dumped its local modern-rock format for ABC's satellite
modern AC format, still as "97X," apparently. That's good news for cross-town
rocker WKIT (100.3 Brewer), which is now one of just a handful of live, local
radio outlets up there.
*Vermont must still be snowed in, because there's been no word from our usual
gang of correspondents up that way, and no FCC news of note from the Green
Mountain State, either. Hope the snow melts soon, guys...
*And here in Upstate New York:
"Smooth Jazz Doesn't Live Here Anymore"...but "Alice" does: Buffalo's WSJZ
(92.9) dumped its smooth-jazz format last week, to become modern AC "Alice at
92.9." The ARS-owned station joins outlets in Denver, San Francisco, and St.
Louis with the "Alice" moniker and the modern AC format. No jocks yet, and
no new calls have been applied for either.
Brand-new NERW correspondent Gavin Burt checks in from "just north of
Albany" with some information on Capital District radio during the Blizzard of
'97: Stations knocked off by the storm included WABY-FM (94.5 Ravena),
WDCD-FM (96.7 Clifton Park), WTRY-FM (98.3 Rotterdam), WCTW (98.5
Catskill), WNYQ (105.7 Queensbury), and at least briefly WPYX (106.5
Albany). WCKM-FM (98.5 Lake George) was apparently running lower power
than usual from their tower on Prospect Mountain in the Adirondacks. One more
note from the Glens Falls area: WENU (101.7 Hudson Falls) has now switched
to an adult standards format, after simulcasting WNYQ for several months.
An update to our Elmira-Corning rundown from last week: WNGZ (104.9
Montour Falls) and WGMF (1490 Watkins Glen) have now been sold to
SabreCom, which was operating them under an LMA anyway. Sale price is
listed as a quarter-million dollars. Expect big changes to the automated
"Wingz 105" classic rock format in the next few months...
Amsterdam's WCSS (1490) has been sold to Weber Communications of
Amsterdam, Inc., by Gem Associates LP.
William Walker, owner of WRWD (107.3 Highland) and WBWZ (93.3 New
Paltz) in the Poughkeepsie market, has filed an application for a 103.7
translator
in Highland, to rebroadcast WQXR (96.3 New York). The translator should
placate Hudson Valley listeners who've had trouble with WQXR's classical-
music signal since Poughkeepsie's new 96.1 signed on last year.
Translators are the big news out of Syracuse. Religious WZXV (99.7 Palmyra-
Rochester) signed on a 103.5 translator serving Syracuse last week. W278AH
are the calls they're mentioning in the ID. All of two watts, albeit from 505'
above average terrain. And the Radio Corporation has applied for a 101.3
Syracuse translator for its WKRL (100.9 North Syracuse).
A bit of Utica information: WUTQ (1550) has joined the simulcast with WADR
(1480 Remsen) and WRNY (1350 Rome). That means you can now sit in
downtown Utica in daylight and hear three signals with satellite big-bands.
And you can now sit in downtown Utica at night and hear almost nothing on
all three frequencies.
Here in Rochester, WHEC-TV (Channel 10) has followed the early-morning lead
of WOKR (Channel 13), adding 30 minutes to its "AM Live" newscast, which
now starts at 5:30 AM. No radio news this week, but we're told there will be
at least one format change to tell you about for next week...
*Digital TV is coming...at least if you're in Boston or New Hampshire. The
big four networks have given the FCC a list of affiliates in the top 10
markets that will be on the air with digital TV by the end of 1998.
In Boston, those are WGBH-TV, WCVB-TV, and Manchester's WMUR-TV. There's no
word yet from the FCC on channel assignments for the new digital broadcasts.
Boston will actually have more DTV than New York, where WCBS-TV is the lone
station on the early-adopters list.
*Take me out to the radio: It's baseball season again, even if it is freezing
outside, and that's enough excuse for us to run down the information we've got
on Northeast radio outlets for America's pastime:
No change in the major-league flagships this year, as the Red Sox continue on
WEEI (850), the Mets stay on WFAN (660), and the Yankees remain on WABC
(770). The Blue Jays are still on CJCL (590 "The Fan") as well as just about
every other AM station in Ontario, or so it seemed last Sunday when we parked
the NERW-mobile at the nice spot we've found on Lake Ontario where all the
Canadian stations blast in.
Now, for the state-by-state rundown of who's where:
MAINE:
The Eastern League's Portland Pirates stay on WPOR (1490) for another season.
We're not sure whether Bangor's Blue Ox are on the radio up there. And of
course you'll hear the Red Sox on just about every small-town station up there...
NEW HAMPSHIRE:
No minor league teams up that way..but of course the Red Sox network finds its
way to every corner of the Granite State, including WGIR (610) in Manchester.
VERMONT:
The Vermont Expos are on Burlington's WVMT (620) for another season of
single-A action. Plenty of Red Sox affiliates as well - just spin the dial
and you'll find them somewhere. What's missing this season is Montreal Expos
baseball, which had been heard on WEAV (960 Plattsburgh NY) in recent
seasons. Expos flagship CIQC (600) doesn't have much signal in Vermont, but
French speakers can tune in the action on CKAC (730).
MASSACHUSETTS - Major Sox affiliates include WEEI, WSAR (1480 Fall
River), WTAG (580 Worcester), and WHYN (560 Springfield), but there's one
big hole this year: no Sox outlet on Cape Cod. WCIB (101.9 Falmouth) didn't
renew for another year, and that means WEEI is scrambling for a new
broadcaster to bring the Sox to the huge summer crowds on the Cape, where its
own signal is weak at best, especially at night. Cape viewers can see some Sox
action on WZBU (Channel 58) in Vineyard Haven, part of the WABU-TV
network. By the way, someone ought to tell the Globe that WCIB isn't on the
network anymore...
Yankees fans in the Worcester area will find the team on WWTM (1440), which
is now simulcasting co-owned WEEI most of the rest of the week.
In the minors, you'll find the Lowell Spinners on WLLH (1400 Lowell-
Lawrence) for another season. The Pittsfield Mets return to WBRK (1340). The
Massachusetts Mad Dogs have moved from Lowell's WCAP (980) to Salem's
WESX (1230), closer to their home base in Lynn.
RHODE ISLAND: Besides Red Sox coverage on WPRO (630) and Yankees
games on WPNW (550), there's AAA action from the Pawtucket Red Sox, with
WLKW (790) as the flagship.
CONNECTICUT: Radio heaven for baseball fans, with affiliates for all three
area major-league teams, as well as three Eastern League clubs. Here's how it
shakes out, with thanks to Bill Dillane:
The New Haven Ravens have WAVZ (1300) as their flagship, with WNTY 990
Southington and WMMM 1260 as affiliates. The New Britain Rock Cats are on
WMRD (1150 Middletown), as well as WLIS (1420 Old Saybrook). WMRD
and WLIS are also carrying some games from the Ravens and the Norwich
Navigators, who move to WSUB (980 Groton) and WILI (1400 Willimantic)
from their former flagship, WVVE (102.3 Stonington).
The Red Sox net includes WTIC (1080 Hartford), which is where everyone east
of the Hudson gets their Sox at night, along with WILI, the WSTC-WNLK-
WINE trimulcast in Fairfield County, WINY (1350) in Putnam, and WAXB
(105.5) across the state line in Patterson NY.
Yankees outlets include newcomer WICC (600 Bridgeport, nights and weekend
games only), WPOP (1410 Hartford, returning after several years), and WWCO
(1240 Waterbury).
NEW YORK - We'll start with the AAA teams, two of which are in new
stadiums this year. The Rochester Red Wings move from WCMF (990) back to
WHTK (1280) after an absence of several years, with an added bonus - Sunday
afternoon games, as well as opening night this Friday and the annual Orioles
exhibition game, will air on sister station WHAM (1180), with a 50 kilowatt
clear-channel signal. Syracuse's SkyChiefs, now in their new home at P&C
Stadium, remain on WHEN (620). And Buffalo's Bisons stay on WGR (550) in
their final American Association season
(they'll join Rochester and Syracuse in
the International League next year). TV coverage is almost nonexistent except
for opening night games, seen in Syracuse on WIXT-TV (Channel 9) and in
Rochester on WHEC-TV (Channel 10).
Further down in the minors, Binghamton's Eastern League Mets are on WNBF
(1290). In the New York-Penn League, the Batavia Clippers are on WBTF
(101.7 Attica), the Hudson Valley Renegades are heard on WBNR (1260
Beacon), the Jamestown Jammers appear on WJTN (1240) and the Watertown
Indians show up on WTNY (790). There's no radio for the Auburn Doubledays
or the Utica Blue Sox.
Thanks to Bill Dillane for Connecticut info and to
http://www.minorleaguebaseball.com for a lot of the other information...and we
look forward to hearing updates from all of you out there!
You'll find us parked
in front of a couple of Zweigle's hot dogs at Rochester's new Frontier Field...
*And finally this week: Since replacing the (very) old Mac with a brand-new
Pentium last month, we've been spending a lot of time checking out radio sites
on the Web, and from time to time we'll be presenting some hits and misses.
Here's what we found this week:
HITS: WSHU/WSUF, Sacred Heart University's public radio outlets for
southern Connecticut and Long Island, have an awfully nice site at
http://www.wshu.org. Coverage maps are included, showing the way in which
they've used translators to create two networks in the region...
and best of all,
they've given their engineer a monthly column. One minor nit to pick: nowhere
on the site will you find WSUF's actual city of license, which is Noyock NY.
Another nifty site is Lance Venta's Mid-Atlantic Radio Page, a worthy southern
counterpart to the Boston Radio Archives (and the soon-to-debut Upstate NY
Radio Archives). You'll find all sorts of radio info stretching from New York
City to Washington DC at http://www.tcnj.edu/~venta2/radio.html.
MISSES -If you're going to have a web site for your radio station, it helps to
keep it up to date..a concept apparently lost on Providence's big AM stations.
Our search for Providence baseball information ran up against a dead end at
www.wpro.com and www.whjj.com. Most of WPRO's links were dead...and at
WHJJ, we found a "Coming Events" list that ended in mid-February. (And
speaking of inaccuracies, does anyone out there know why Broadcasting and
Cable magazine listed "WIYY(FM) Baltimore [formerly WTYY(FM)]" in last
week's issue? Or why they insist on listing "Unavailable" for the format or
facilities of any station not listed in last year's Yearbook? Or why they
still think WLKW in Providence is classical, four years after the fact?
Have these people never listened to a radio in their lives? Never mind...
*And with that, we'll pull ourselves away from the keyboard for a few hours.
Next week, all the corrections to the baseball list, and much more...stay
tuned!
- -=Scott Fybush - fybush@world.std.com=-
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