WOR (AM)
City | New York, New York |
---|---|
Broadcast area | New York metropolitan area |
Branding | WOR Radio 710 AM |
Slogan | New York's #1 Station for News and Talk |
Frequency | 710 kHz(also on HD Radio)[1] |
First air date | February 22, 1922 |
Format | News/Talk/Sports |
Language(s) | English |
Power | 50,000 watts |
Class | A (clear channel) |
Facility ID | 7710 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°47′51″N 74°5′24″W / 40.79750°N 74.09000°WCoordinates: 40°47′51″N 74°5′24″W / 40.79750°N 74.09000°W |
Callsign meaning | None; sequentially assigned |
Affiliations | Premiere Radio Networks, WOR Mets Radio Network |
Owner |
iHeartMedia (AMFM Radio Licenses, LLC) |
Sister stations | WAXQ, WHTZ, WKTU, WLTW, WWPR-FM |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website |
wor710 |
WOR (710 kHz) is a 50,000 Watt class A clear-channel, AM station located in New York, New York. The station is owned by iHeartMedia. The station airs a mix of local and syndicated Talk radio shows, primarily from co-owned Premiere Networks, including The Rush Limbaugh Show, The Sean Hannity Show, and Coast to Coast AM; all three of these programs previously aired on WABC, WOR's competitor, before iHeartMedia purchased WOR and moved them there.
WOR serves as the flagship station for the New York Mets and Rutgers University's football and men's basketball teams.
WOR is one of the oldest radio stations in New York, with a three-letter call sign indicating the station dates from the 1920s. The station broadcasts from studios in the Tribeca district of Manhattan at the former AT&T Building, with its transmitter in Rutherford, New Jersey.
History
WOR began broadcasting on February 22, 1922, using a 500-watt transmitter on 360 meters (833 kc.) from Bamberger's Department store in Newark, New Jersey. The station's first broadcast was made with a home made microphone which was a megaphone attached to a telephone transmitter, while Al Jolson's "April Showers" was played.[2] Bamberger's desire to sell radio sets explains why the department store put the station on the air. The WOR call sign was reissued from the U.S. maritime radio service. The call letters have no meaning, being sequentially assigned. They had previously been authorized for use by the ship SS California, owned by the Orient Lines.
The station initially operated limited hours, sharing time with two other stations, WDT and WJY, which also operated on 833 kc. WOR changed frequency to 740 kc. in June 1923 and shared time with WJY until July 1926, when WJY signed off for good and WOR received full use of the frequency. In December 1924, WOR acquired a studio in Manhattan, to originate many of its programs, so that stars of the day based in New York would have better access to the station. On June 17, 1927, as a result of General Order 40, WOR moved to 710 kilocycles, the channel it currently occupies. Unlike most stations of that era, it was not required to change its dial position due to the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement. Later in 1926, WOR moved from its original New York City studio on the 9th floor of Chickering Hall at 27 West 57th Street to 1440 Broadway, two blocks from Times Square.
WOR was first a charter member of the CBS Radio Network, being one of the 16 stations that aired the first CBS network program on September 18, 1927.[3] In partnership with Chicago radio station WGN and Cincinnati radio station WLW, WOR formed the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1934 and became its New York flagship station. Mutual was one of the "Big Four" national radio networks in the United States during the 1930s–1980s. In 1941, the station changed its city of license from Newark to New York City. However, for all intents and purposes it had been a New York City station since its early days, and had actually moved its studios across the Hudson two years after it signed on.
In 1957, WOR ended its relationship with Mutual and became an independent station, with Mutual's New York outlet becaming WAAT in Newark (today WNYM Hackensack NJ). But WOR continued to carry Mutual's "Top of the News" with Fulton Lewis for 15 minutes each evening, Monday to Friday at 7:00 p.m. for several more years. For a few years in the late-1950s, WOR aired selected St. Louis Cardinals baseball games sponsored by Budweiser due to the departures of the Dodgers and Giants from New York to California.
In 1948, WOR put an FM radio station on the air as WOR-FM. WOR had been experimenting with FM broadcasts as W2XWI from its Carteret, New Jersey transmitter site from 1938. Today that station is 98.7 WEPN-FM. In 1949, WOR started a sister TV station, WOR-TV, on channel 9. This station became WWOR-TV after it and 710 WOR were sold to separate companies in 1987.
From the 1930s to the early 1980s, WOR was described as a full-service station, featuring a mix of music, talk and news. There was an emphasis on news reports and talk programs, but music was played also, usually a blend of pop standards and adult contemporary tunes. WOR played several songs per hour weekday mornings from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. and again afternoons from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. WOR also featured music on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. In ratings reports, WOR was classified as a MOR/Talk station rather than a News/Talk station until 1984. From 1983 to about 1985, WOR gradually stopped playing music altogether, evolving into its current talk format. Past notable hosts were Ed and Pegeen Fitzgerald, Arlene Francis, Patricia McCann, Long John Nebel, Bernard Meltzer, Barry Farber, Jean Shepherd, Bob and Ray, Jack O'Brian, Bob Grant and Gene Klavan. From April 15, 1945, to March 21, 1963, newspaper columnist Dorothy Kilgallen and her husband Dick Kollmar (1910–1971) co-hosted a late morning show on WOR called Breakfast With Dorothy and Dick.[4]
The station was known for its detailed, 15-minute news reports on the hour. Noted newsmen such as Henry Gladstone, Harry Hennessey, John Wingate, Lyle Vann, Peter Roberts, and Roger Skibenes were the backbone of the news department. WOR introduced live, on-air, helicopter traffic reports with pilot reporters "Fearless" Fred Feldman and later George Meade. Unfortunately, on January 10, 1969, fill-in pilot/reporter Frank McDermott died when the WOR helicopter crashed into an apartment building in Astoria, Queens as he was broadcasting a traffic update. The building caught fire and McDermott's body was found nearby.
WOR's most renowned program was its morning show Rambling with Gambling, which aired continuously from March 1925 to September 2000 across three generations of hosts: John B. Gambling, his son John A. Gambling, and his grandson John R. Gambling. After John R. Gambling's edition of the show was dropped, he moved to WABC, where he hosted a late-morning show until January 2008. He returned to WOR mornings in May 2008. Although never a favorite of young listeners, WOR was this group's radio station of record in the New York metropolitan area during bad winter weather. Students of all ages dialed up 710 AM on their radios as the Gamblings dutifully announced a comprehensive list of school closings for New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, in strict alphabetical order. Currently, Gambling hosts middays on 970 WNYM, after retiring from WOR in December 2013.
WOR broadcasts 24 hours each day with 50,000 watts using a three-tower directional antenna. It shares Class A status on 710 kHz with KIRO (AM) in Seattle and each station must protect the other. WOR's transmitter is located in Rutherford, New Jersey. It is the only New York City AM station to have retained its original three-letter call sign, the oldest continually used call letters in the New York City area.
On April 30, 2005, WOR moved its offices and studios from 1440 Broadway at 40th Street in Midtown Manhattan where it had been based for 79 years to a new facility at 111 Broadway near Wall Street in the Financial District, Manhattan before moving to the Avenue of The Americas in Tribeca where it is currently headquartered.
On August 13, 2012, it was announced that WOR was to be purchased by Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia), pending FCC approval.[5] A local marketing agreement began on August 15, 2012. On December 20, 2012, the day Clear Channel officially took ownership of the station, the Dr. Joy Browne Show, the Gov. David Paterson Show, and the Mike Huckabee Show were removed from the WOR program schedule.[6]
On January 2, 2013, WOR added former WABC weekend host Mark Simone to its weekday morning line up.[7] WOR now offers ten hours of live and local programming on weekdays, with the rest of the day offering syndicated programs. Along with the change in programming came the slogan "New York's Only Live and Local News and Conversation." In late 2014, former WNBC sportscaster Len Berman and Tampa Bay Area radio host Todd Schnitt were hired as the station's morning hosts, after WOR cancelled the hot talk Elliot in the Morning Show, simulcast from iHeart Alternative Rock station WWDC (FM) in Washington, D.C..
On January 1, 2014, both the Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity shows were transferred from rival Talk Radio station 770 WABC, owned by Cumulus Media. Since Premiere Networks, owned by iHeartMedia, syndicates both popular shows, WOR wanted them to boost its ratings.[8]
On November 4, 2013, WOR and the New York Mets announced the team's games will be broadcast on 710 AM, as well as advertised on all local Clear Channel radio stations, beginning with the 2014 baseball season.[9] The station also broadcasts "The WOR Sports Zone", hosted by Pete McCarthy which airs from immediately before and after Mets games. When the team is idle, McCarthy hosts a sports show weeknights from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. followed by syndicated family finances radio host Dave Ramsey.
WOR Radio Network
WOR was once the flagship station of the now-defunct WOR Radio Network. The network distributed nationally syndicated programming, all from the WOR studios at 111 Broadway in New York. Following the sale of WOR to Clear Channel Communications, what was left of the WOR Radio Network was folded into Premiere Networks, Clear Channel's syndication wing.
Past WOR personalities
Past notable WOR program hosts and newscasters included these personalities.
- Lou Adler
- Richard N. Ash MD
- Glenn Beck
- Gene Burns
- Joy Browne
- Uncle Don Carney
- Jay Diamond
- Rocco DiSpirito, succeeded Arthur Scwhartz as host of Food Talk (October 2004 through December 2005)
- Lou Dobbs
- Jerry Doyle
- Warren Eckstein
- Bob Elliott and Ray Goulding (Bob and Ray)
- Jinx Falkenburg and Tex McCrary (Tex and Jinx)
- Barry Farber
- Arlene Francis
- Joe Franklin
- Carlton Fredericks
- Arthur Frommer
- Mike Gallagher
- John A. Gambling
- John B. Gambling
- Lisa G
- Bob Grant
- Barry Gray
- Donna Hanover
- Ellis Henican
- Ronald Hoffman
- Gene Klavan
- Walter Kiernan
- Dorothy Kilgallen and Richard Kollmar (Dorothy and Dick)
- Lionel
- Jim Lounsbury
- Mary Margaret McBride
- Bernarr Macfadden
- Steve Malzberg
- Bernard Meltzer
- Dennis Miller
- Long John Nebel
- James Randi
- Bill O'Reilly
- David Paterson
- Joey Reynolds
- Joan Rivers
- Thurman Ruth
- Michael Savage
- Jay Severin
- Jean Shepherd
- Michael Smerconish
- Michael Strange
- Orson Welles
References
- ↑ "HD Radio station guide for New York, NY".
- ↑ 1922-Year Radio's Population Soared (PDF). Broadcasting. May 14, 1962. p. 114. Retrieved March 6, 2014.(PDF)
- ↑ Radio Digest, September 1927, quoted in: McLeod, Elizabeth (September 20, 2002). CBS—In the Beginning, History of American Broadcasting. Retrieved on 2007-01-01. The other stations were WADC in Akron, Ohio; WAIU in Columbus, Ohio; WCAO in Baltimore; WCAU in Philadelphia; WEAN in Providence; WFBL in Syracuse; WGHP in Detroit; WJAS in Pittsburgh; WKRC in Cincinnati; WMAK in Buffalo-Lockport; WMAQ in Chicago; WNAC in Boston; WOWO in Fort Wayne, Indiana; KMOX in St. Louis; and KOIL in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
- ↑ Dunning, John. (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Pp. 117-118.
- ↑ Clear Channel to Purchase WOR Radio (press release). Mediabistro, 13 August 2012.
- ↑ http://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/69551/wor-new-york-sold-to-clear-channel/ WOR New York Sold To Clear Channel
- ↑ "WOR Adds Mark Simone For 10a-Noon". All Access.
- ↑ http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/rush-hannity-leaving-cumulus-wor-article-1.1411314/
- ↑ "The Mets Find New Home at WOR". WOR 710.
External links
- WOR AM
- WOR AM History
- WOR News Historical Profile & Interviews - 1978
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WOR
- Radio-Locator Information on WOR
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WOR
Preceded by 860/WABC 1939–1940 |
Radio Home of the New York Yankees 1942 |
Succeeded by 1010 WINS 1944–1957 |
Preceded by WFAN 1987–2013 |
Radio Home of the New York Mets 2014- |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
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