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NERW 1/23: Big Changes at WAVZ
------------------------------E-MAIL EDITION-----------------------------
--------------------------NorthEast Radio Watch--------------------------
January 23, 2002
IN THIS ISSUE:
*CONNECTICUT: WAVZ Drops Standards
*NEW YORK: Ownership Dispute Silences WWJS
*MAINE: New LPFM Launches
-----------------------------by Scott Fybush-----------------------------
-------------------------<http://www.fybush.com>-------------------------
*The sound of sports talk is coming to southern CONNECTICUT this week,
as yet another Clear Channel station ditches the standards format in
favor of satellite-delivered talk.
This time around, it's WAVZ (1300) in New Haven making the change. As
soon as tomorrow (Jan. 24), the 1000-watt station will become "The
Zone, Fox Sports Radio 1300," airing the 24-hour Fox Sports feed
distributed by Clear Channel's Premiere Radio. WAVZ was already
carrying local sports programming that included Ravens AHL hockey;
that will continue, but the station doesn't expect to add much more in
the way of local talk.
The standards continue for New Haven listeners on WQUN (1220 Hamden).
*Elsewhere in the Nutmeg State, we noted the arrival of some "refugee"
call letters from South Florida, buried amidst the FCC's call changes
this week. Those would be "WTMI," recently sent packing after decades
in Miami, where they were associated with the classical music format
on 93.1 FM.
Cox Radio turned off the classics in Miami on New Year's Eve, flipping
the station to dance as WPYM, "Party 93.1," which opened the door for
the folks at Marlin Broadcasting to apply for the WTMI calls for WCCC
(1290) in West Hartford. There's a family connection there: Marlin
sold WTMI to Cox a few years back, and WTMI's classical programming,
from Marlin's Beethoven network, is still heard on 1290, at least
after Howard Stern's show is over each morning.
FM news from around Connecticut: Tracy Austin will leave her PD post
at Hartford CHR WKSS (95.7) on February 1; she's headed back to her
native Texas to be PD at KRBE (104.1) in Houston. Kiss APD/MD Mike McGowan
will handle interim duties there until a successor is named. Over in
New London, Mark Sommers brings some big-city pipes to WBMW (106.5 New
London); the former WABC and WCBS-FM jock will be doing middays for
the hot AC outlet. On the other end of the state, Joe Loverro
replaces Bill Simmons in mornings at WQQQ (103.3 Sharon).
And some TV news: WCTX (Channel 59) in New Haven will carry 50 Red Sox
games this season, as part of a package from Boston's WFXT. No word on
whether the UPN affiliate will also be picking up games from either
New York baseball team. WCTX also gets a new owner; the FCC approved a
duopoly this week between WCTX and WTNH (Channel 8) that will allow
WTNH owner LIN Television to change its LMA of channel 59 into a
purchase from K-W Television.
*One RHODE ISLAND note this week: WRNI (1290 Providence) and WXNI
(1230 Westerly) severed some ties from parent public broadcaster
WBUR-FM (90.9 Boston), moving production of all local breaks and news
programming from WBUR's Boston studios to WRNI's own facilities at One
Union Station in Providence.
*A quiet week in MASSACHUSETTS, though we note a minor programming
change at WBZ (1030), which joins its CBS sisters around the country
in picking up the audio of "60 Minutes" on Sunday nights. The
simulcast began January 13. Across town at Greater Media, WMJX morning
show producer Robyn Bradley gets a promotion to promotion director.
Out on Cape Cod, WOCN (103.9) wants to boost power a bit, jumping from
3000 watts to 5500 watts and adding a directional antenna. While the
new configuration would create a bit of interference with WBCN (104.1)
up in Boston, it would fall entirely in the ocean.
And in Worcester, we remember Carl Cooper, the host for 20 years of
the Saturday morning "A Tasteful Blend" program on public radio WICN
(90.5). Cooper, who also served as a board member at the station, died
January 19 at age 73.
*Up in NEW HAMPSHIRE, there's a minor feud brewing between New
Hampshire Public Radio and the New Hampshire Association of
Broadcasters. NHPR withdrew its NHAB membership this week, expressing
concern that support for a state lottery program by NHAB leaders could
put NHPR's political neutrality in question.
Over on the Seacoast, Robert Greer was named market manager for Clear
Channel's Portsmouth cluster, including big gun WHEB.
*A former candidate for governor of VERMONT is becoming a television
reporter. Ruth Dwyer, who ran for the post twice, is joining the
staff of ABC affiliate WVNY (Channel 22) in Burlington at month's end.
*Clear Channel picked up another FM in MAINE this week, converting its
LMA of Gopher Hill Broadcasting's WQSS (102.5 Camden) into
full-fledged ownership for $1.72 million.
Down in Portland, Chuck Igo landed on his feet as the new
afternoon-drive jock on oldies WYNZ (100.9 Westbrook). Igo, who's
always lived in the Portland area during his long career in Boston
radio (most recently in overnights on WROR), will keep making the haul
down I-95 to do weekend work at the Greater Media cluster in the Hub.
And in Rockland, they're getting ready to turn on the first LPFM in
the Pine Tree State. WRFR-LP (93.3) in Rockland did a test broadcast
New Year's Eve, reaching out from the Penobscot School as far as
Camden with its 100 watt signal. Official programming is scheduled to
start around February 14, with a 24-hour schedule that will include a
morning show hosted by school founder Joe Steinberger.
*A quick swing through CANADA finds the CRTC calling for applications
for new radio services in Montreal, Sherbrooke, Chicoutimi and
Trois-Rivieres. The applications are due in to Hull by April 18; we
wonder if this could mean the reactivation of some long-dormant AM
frequencies in these communities (such as 600, 850, 1410 and 1570 in
Montreal; 1510 in Sherbrooke; 1580 in Chicoutimi and 1140 in
Trois-Rivieres) as the FM dial rapidly fills up there.
Over in Moncton, New Brunswick, CKOE (100.9) applies to change from
non-commercial to commercial operation, to better fund its Christian
contemporary programming.
And in Toronto, Pat Cardinal is out as PD at Corus' Energy Radio (CING
95.3 Hamilton, etc.). AllAccess says Cardinal left "of his own
accord," with Dave Ferrell handling interim PD duties.
*We'll begin our NEW YORK report just across the border from Canada,
at WWJS (90.1 Watertown), where a dispute that involves the station's
operators, the church that supported it and the city of Watertown has
taken the religious station silent for now.
WWJS is licensed to the Liberty Christian Center, which is hoping to
receive tax-exempt status from Watertown. It had been operated by
Charles and Karleen Savidge, who are the in-laws of Liberty pastor
Steven Bryant, until Bryant locked them out of the 210 Court Street
building shared by the church and the radio station.
Bryant told Watertown media outlets that he holds the WWJS license;
the Savidges say that's impossible, because Bryant is a Canadian
citizen. For now, WWJS's equipment remains locked inside the Court
Street building and the station remains off the air; we'll keep you
posted as this situation heads to court.
Over here in Western New York, the voices are about to change on
Rochester oldies outlet WBBF (950 Rochester/93.3 Fairport), as PD
Bobby Hatfield gets ready to depart the Entercom station. (Under his
real name of Joe Reilly, he's the new owner of WHLM 930 down in
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, which will inaugurate regular programming
next month.)
Dave Symonds, who's already operations manager for the Entercom
cluster, will assume PD duties for WBBF, while Mike Vickers moves from
middays to Hatfield's old afternoon drive slot. Dave Radigan will take
over midday and assistant PD duties, we're told.
Over in the Albany area, an old set of calls returned to the dial this
week, as WCPT (100.9 Albany) changed back to WKLI. The station, now
doing standards as "Magic 100.9," abandoned those calls a few years
ago when it became hot AC "Point," sending them down to 94.5 in
Ravena. But that station, now doing hard rock as "94 Rock," changed
calls to WRCZ this month, freeing WKLI for a return to Albany.
Down in Hudson, we have the first LPFM grant in the Empire State. The
Enlarged City School District of Hudson gets 100 watts on 97.1; no
calls have been announced yet.
Over in Gloversville, low-power W49BA changes calls to WFNY-CA, to
match its construction-permit sister radio outlet, WFNY (1440).
Downstate, the partial simulcast of public radio WNYC-FM (93.9) on
WNYE (91.5 New York) will end January 31, when WNYC increases power
from the Empire State Building. Our weekend visit to the city found
WNYC still with a weaker signal than the stations that had been on
Empire before September 11, but with no real signal problems as far
out as Rockland County. (WNYC will still require millions of dollars
to pay for the transmission equipment to replace the site it lost atop
the World Trade Center; among the other stations helping out is San
Francisco's KQED, which will conduct a one-day pledge drive tomorrow
to help WNYC pay for the transmitter and antenna at Empire and a new
auxiliary site at Conde Nast.)
We also spent some time listening to WBAI (99.5), which has been in an
intensely self-celebratory mode since Pacifica's national leadership
decided to reverse some of the programming and management decisions
made during the last few controversial months. The return to local
control at WBAI includes the resumption of Amy Goodman's "Democracy
Now" show, which in turn means some schedule changes across the river
at WFMU (91.1 East Orange), which had been airing the political talk
show since it was ousted from WBAI. We're hoping that by the next time
we return to New York, WBAI will have found something else to talk
about besides itself; there was very literally not a moment in which
we switched to 99.5 when the station was talking about anything other
than its internal political troubles.
On the commercial side of the dial, WQXR (96.3 New York) ups Penny
Gaffney from general sales manager to vice president.
Out on Long Island, WGSM (740 Huntington) wants to change its signal a
bit to better serve Asian communities in New York City. The station,
now doing Korean-language programming, wants to drop daytime power
from 25 kW to 20 kW, but with a big pattern change that would add a
lobe to the west over Queens and Brooklyn. (Right now, most of WGSM's
power is aimed southeast over Long Island and out to sea.) WGSM would
increase its night power from 43 watts to a whopping 50 watts as well.
*Over to NEW JERSEY we go, then, and we start with some TV trivia:
Family Stations won't get to put WFME-TV (Channel 66) in West Milford
on Dish Network's local-stations package for New York City. It seems
that Dish Network parent Echostar never received WFME's notification
that it desired satellite carriage, and WFME's lawyers can't produce a
certified-mail receipt to prove they sent it! (NERW had a chance to
see some of WFME's, er, "programming" over the weekend; its weak
signal from a site near Mahwah was filled mainly with a full-screen
station ID and the audio of co-owned WFME-FM 94.7 in Newark!)
Andy Santoro is rejoining his old Greater Media colleague Charlie
Banta; he's signed on as vice president of Banta's Millennium station
group in New Jersey.
Nassau Broadcasting and Multicultural Broadcasting had their swap of
New Jersey and Pennsylvania stations granted, but Multicultural only
gets WHWH (1350) and WTTM (1680) in Princeton with an "expanded-band
condition"; we believe that means one of the two frequencies will have
to go silent in the next few years. (Which reminds us: it's now been
well over five years since WJDM 1530 in Elizabeth spawned the
expanded-band station that's now WWRU 1660, yet 1530 was still on this
weekend...)
*PENNSYLVANIA has a new station this week. WBMP (88.1 Warwick) signed
on, serving the Reading area with the religious programming already
heard closer to Philadelphia and in the Lehigh Valley on WBYO (88.9
Sellersville) and WBYX (88.7 Stroudsburg).
Jay Michaels is out as PD of Pittsburgh's urban WAMO-FM (106.7 Beaver
Falls); music director "DJ Boogie" is handling things on an interim
basis there.
And we note with sadness the passing of Dan Foley, whose career in
Northeast broadcasting included stints at WBIS in Bristol,
Connecticut, WCAU-FM in Philadelphia and the former WKBS-TV (Channel
48) in the Philadelphia market. More recently, Foley had been an
announcer for ABC ("World News Tonight" on the weekends) and Comedy
Central's "Daily Show." Foley died of cancer January 18; he was 52 and
is survived by his wife Pat Farnack, an anchor for New York's WCBS
(880).
*We'll finish up for the week just over the state line in DELAWARE,
where WNRK (1260 Newark) changes hands from Vincent Klepac's Vin-Lor
Broadcasting to Al Campagnone's ARC Broadcasting, for a reported
$142,000.
*And that's it for another week. Don't forget to check out the latest
Tower Site of the Week on fybush.com, as we stop by WADO in the Jersey
Meadowlands to see how much things have changed in the last few
years. We'll be back next Monday...see you then!
-----------------------NorthEast Radio Watch------------------------
(c)2002 Scott Fybush
www.fybush.com
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