WFBL
Broadcast area | Syracuse, New York |
---|---|
Frequency | 1390 kHz |
Programming | |
Format | 1950s and 1960s Oldies |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
History | |
First air date | November 19, 1924 (1922 when including WLAH) |
Former call signs | WDCW (1993-1989) WFBL (1989-1993) WLLF (1989) WFBL (1924-1989) |
Call sign meaning | None (sequentially assigned, although later slogans have included "When Feeling Blue, Listen" and "First Broadcasting License") |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 34821 |
Class | B |
Power | 5,000 watts day 5,000 watts night |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°9′10.00″N 76°11′35.00″W / 43.1527778°N 76.1930556°W |
Links | |
Webcast | http://ice23.securenetsystems.net/WNDR.m3u |
Website | http://dinofm.com/ |
WFBL (1390 kHz AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Syracuse, New York and owned by Wolf Radio, Inc. It serves Syracuse and its suburbs, with studios and offices located on Smokey Hollow Road in Baldwinsville. Since September 2017 the station has simulcast Craig Fox's "Dinosaur Radio" classic hits format.
History
The earliest Syracuse broadcasting stations, all of which were short-lived, were: WBAB (Andrew J. Potter, April 19, 1922—March 22, 1923); WDAI (Hughes Electrical Corporation, May 16, 1922—November 19, 1923); WFAB (Carl Frank Woese, June 6, 1922—October 9, 1924)[1] and WLAH, first licensed in the summer of 1922 to Samuel Woodworth,[2] and deleted at the same time WFBL was first licensed.[3] A contemporary write-up of WFBL's debut referred to both WFAB and WLAH as low-powered "private stations", which "have now been dismantled", and contrasted them to WFBL, which it called "Syracuse's first professional station".[4]
WFBL's first license was issued to the Onondaga Hotel, and dated November 20, 1924.[5] The call letters were sequentially assigned,[6] and the station initially adopted the slogan "When Feeling Blue, Listen", based on the call sign. WFBL was described as the culmination of "many months" of cooperative effort between the Radio Dealers Association and the hotel. Studios were located on the 11th floor of the Onondaga, with an antenna constructed on the roof.[4]
Samuel Woodworth was credited with having "shouldered the burden of mechanical installation and testing",[4] and some of the WLAH equipment had been transferred to be used by WFBL.[7] Consequently station staff began to link WLAH's and WFBL's histories, resulting with the station's slogan later becoming "First Broadcasting License" for central New York. However, government regulators have consistently considered WLAH and WFBL to be separate stations, and Federal Communications Commission records list November 20, 1924 as WFBL's first license date.[8] (Woodworth was WFBL's General Manager at the time of his death in 1954.)[9]
WFBL was 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.[10] In late 1932, controlling interest in the station was bought by Oscar and Robert Soule and Samuel H. Cook.[11]
From May 1979 to October 1980, WFBL, then known as "Fire 14," used consultant Mike Joseph's Hot Hits format as a Top 40 competitor to 1490 WOLF. The station dropped "Hot Hits" in October 1980 in favor of the then-emerging adult standards format called Music of Your Life. The WFBL calls (and standards format) later moved to 1050 AM in Baldwinsville, New York (now WBVG) before returning to their original home at 1390.
WFBL changed its call letters to WLLF on October 17, 1989, but returned to WFBL two weeks later. On September 21, 1993, it became WDCW, but returned once again to WFBL on December 1, 2003.[12]
For a few years, when it was owned by Buckley Broadcasting, WFBL featured a line-up that closely mirrored its sister talk station, 710 WOR in New York City. This continued until April 7, 2008 at 6:00AM, when WFBL switched formats from "Talk Radio 1390" to "Oldies 1390", featuring music from the 1950s and 1960s.[13][14] However, on October 12, 2009, the Oldies format moved to WSEN 1050 and WFBL returned to the talk radio format.
In late 2015, Leatherstocking Media Group reached an agreement to sell some of its assets to the Family Life Network, a regional Christian music network. The sale did not include WFBL but it did give the network rights to share WFBL's transmitter and gave Family Life right of first refusal to purchase WFBL and match any bid for the station; although because Family Life owned no AM stations and promptly traded away the other Syracuse station included in the deal to Craig Fox, such a sale was deemed unlikely.
On September 3, 2016 WFBL went silent due to insufficient funds to correct equipment problems. The station resumed broadcasting on August 7, 2017. Craig Fox reached an agreement to purchase the station's license for Wolf Radio, Inc. from Leatherstocking for $275,000; while there were questions whether Fox, who was at the maximum number of allowable license holdings in the Syracuse market and had run into complications with the Family Life trades, would be allowed to consummate the sale,[15] it was consummated on August 22, 2017.
References
- ^ "United States Pioneer Broadcast Service Stations" (earlyradiohistory.us)
- ^ "New Stations: Broadcasting Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, September 1, 1922, page 3.
- ^ "Alterations and Corrections: Broadcasting Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, November 1, 1924, page 10.
- ^ a b c "Syracuse Will Dine to Onondaga Orchestra Tunes as Radio Dealers Open Powerful Broadcast Station" by Howard H. Smith, Syracuse Herald, November 19, 1924, page 15.
- ^ "New Stations: Broadcasting Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, November 1, 1924, page 3.
- ^ Other stations first licensed the same month as WFBL included WFBK, Hanover, New Hampshire; WFBM, Indianapolis, Indiana; WFBQ, Raleigh, North Carolina; and WFBR, Baltimore, Maryland.
- ^ "WFBL Was Born of Necessity: To Sell More Radios!" by Joe Ganley, January 25, 1987. (Reprinted in More Than Just a Sound by Steve Auyer, September 2001, pages 54-55)
- ^ "First License" entry AM Query Results: WFBL (FCC.gov)
- ^ "Samuel Woodworth" (obituary), The Billboard, November 6, 1954, page 53.
- ^ "Columbia Broadcasting System: Radio Stations" (advertisement), Radio Digest, September 1927, page 20. The other stations were WOR (Newark); WADC (Akron); WAIU (Columbus); WCAO (Baltimore); WCAU (Philadelphia); WEAN (Providence); WGHP (Detroit); WJAS (Pittsburgh); WKRC (Cincinnati);WMAK (Buffalo-Lockport); WMAQ (Chicago); WNAC (Boston); WOWO (Fort Wayne); KMOX (Saint Louis); and KOIL (Council Bluffs).
- ^ "Notice (untitled)". Broadcasting. November 15, 1932. p. 16. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
- ^ "Call Sign History: WFBL". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
- ^ "WSEN, WFBL to Flip Formats", April 1, 2008 (CNYRadio.com)
- ^ "NorthEast Radio Watch: New York", April 7, 2008 (fybush.com)
- ^ "Station Sales Week of 4/28" by Lance Venta, April 28, 2017 (radioinsight.com)
External links
- WFBL official Web site
- Facility details for Facility ID WFBL ({{{2}}}) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- {{{2}}} in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
- Template:FCC history cards
- "WFBL: An 80-year Retrospective" by Scott Jameson, March 11, 2004 (CNYradio.com)
- "The Mike Joseph Hot Hits Radio Format (77-84)" by Steve McVie, September 3, 2016 (stevemcvie.com)
Further reading
More Than Just Sound: Early AM Radio in Syracuse, NY by Steve Auyer, September 2001.