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WBFO

Coordinates: 43°00′11″N 78°45′54″W / 43.003°N 78.765°W / 43.003; -78.765
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from WOLN)
WBFO
Broadcast areaBuffalo metropolitan area
Frequency88.7 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingWBFO
Programming
FormatPublic Radio - News - Talk
SubchannelsHD2: WBFO The Bridge (AAA)
HD3: Radio Bilingue (Spanish Public radio)
AffiliationsNational Public Radio
Public Radio Exchange
American Public Media
BBC World Service
Ownership
Owner
  • Buffalo Toronto Public Media
  • (Western New York Public Broadcasting Association)
WNED-TV, WNED-FM
History
First air date
January 6, 1959; 65 years ago (1959-01-06)
Call sign meaning
WBFO: Buffalo
WOLN: Olean
WUBJ: University at Buffalo (Jamestown or Jazz)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID63113
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT117 meters (384 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
43°00′11″N 78°45′54″W / 43.003°N 78.765°W / 43.003; -78.765
Repeater(s)88.1 WUBJ (Jamestown)
91.3 WOLN (Olean)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Listen live (HD3)
Websitewbfo.org
radiobilingue.org (HD3)

WBFO (88.7 FM) is a non-commercial, listener-supported, public radio station in Buffalo, New York. It is owned by the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association, doing business as Buffalo Toronto Public Media. Along with sister stations 94.5 WNED-FM and channel 17 WNED-TV, it broadcasts from studios in the Lower Terrace section of downtown Buffalo.[2]

WBFO is a Class B station. It has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 50,000 watts. The transmitter is off Millersport Highway (New York State Route 263) in Getzville.[3] Programming is also heard on two satellite stations: WUBJ (88.1 FM) in Jamestown, and WOLN (91.3 FM) in Olean. WBFO broadcasts using HD Radio technology. It plays adult album alternative on its HD2 subchannel and Spanish-language public radio on its HD3 subchannel.

Programming

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WBFO is a member station of National Public Radio (NPR). The station airs a news, talk and information format with music programs in the evening. Weekdays begin with NPR's Morning Edition. Also heard on weekdays are All Things Considered, Here and Now, Capitol Pressroom, Fresh Air and Marketplace. The WBFO staff provides local news updates during the day. Monday through Thursday from 10 to 11 a.m., What's Next? is heard, a Buffalo-centered interview and call-in show produced by WBFO. In the evening, WBFO presents The Bridge, an adult album alternative music service that also airs fulltime on WBFO-HD2.

Weekends feature one-hour public radio shows on a variety of topics: The Splendid Table, On The Media, The TED Radio Hour, Planet Money, Radiolab, A Way with Words, Science Friday, Travel with Rick Steves, Freakonomics Radio and Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Overnight, the BBC World Service is heard.

History

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First WBFO logo under WNYPBA ownership, used from 2012 to February 3, 2020

Jazz and Blues

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WBFO signed on the air on January 6, 1959; 65 years ago (1959-01-06).[4] It was owned and operated by the State University of New York at Buffalo (UB). At first, the station was only powered at 190 watts. For many years, the university operated it as a jazz station most of the day. After the start of National Public Radio in 1971, WBFO carried NPR's initial program All Things Considered and later added Morning Edition in 1979. The rest of the schedule featured local jazz shows in middays, evenings and late nights plus blues music and specialty programming on weekends.

UB was one of two public broadcasting organizations active in Western New York at the time, the other being the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association, whose AM, FM and TV stations all carried the call sign WNED. WNED's AM station, AM 970, had a news and information format that also carried Morning Edition and All Things Considered, along with other public radio shows shared with WBFO. By 2010, UB had eliminated the daytime and much of the evening music programming on 88.7 FM for news shows. At the same time, it discussed a merger with WNED.

Switch to News and Information

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WNED purchased WBFO in July 2011. The new owner incorporated some of the channel's news features and staff into a combined lineup which debuted on March 1, 2012. Once listeners began tuning in WBFO for news and information, Western New York Public Broadcasting could sell 970 AM. On November 30, 2012, 970 WNED was sold to Christian radio owner Crawford Broadcasting. The call letters on 970 changed to WDCZ.

All of the network music programming WBFO had carried on weekends was dropped. WBFO became exclusively a news and information station.[5]). Among the programs eliminated from the old WBFO were the last jazz programs originating from a Buffalo area radio station at that time.[6][7] Jazz eventually returned as part of the broad-based adult standards format on the revived WEBR in 2020.

Buffalo Toronto Public Media

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WBFO, along with WNED-FM-TV, began collectively referring to themselves as "Buffalo Toronto Public Media" on February 4, 2020.[8][9] The rebranding was in part to better identify WBFO and the WNED stations as part of a single organization. It also reflects WNED-TV's significant Canadian viewership and financial support, though cable and satellite carriage. WNED officials told The Buffalo News that the organization's radio stations have minimal listenership in Canada.[8]

WBFO leases an as-yet unutilized satellite studio in Toronto, Canada.[10] Previously, WBFO broadcast from the South campus (a.k.a. Main Street Campus) of the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York.

Past Programs

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The WNED and WBFO building

Prior to March 2012, WBFO presented a full-service mix of news and music programming that incorporated blues and jazz. WBFO's local news department had been highly recognized by the New York State Associated Press Broadcasters Association. WBFO was all-news and information during the day and featured jazz at night. On weekends there had been a mix of nationally syndicated talk programs (such as Car Talk and Only a Game) on weekend mornings. Weekend music programs included The Thistle & Shamrock, Bebop and Beyond, and Piano Jazz with Marian McPartland in the evenings. Locally originated blues programming was broadcast on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

A four-hour block of jazz programming during the midday shift was eliminated in 2010, with Fresh Air moving to an earlier time slot and additional talk programming (all network or syndicated) added. The program changes also eliminated an additional two hours of jazz and local music in the evening time slot, pushing the start of jazz programming from 8 p.m. back to 10 p.m., being replaced by replays of programming that had already aired on WBFO earlier in the day.

All remaining local and syndicated music programming on WBFO, with the exception of the weekend afternoon blues blocks which were moved to evenings were eliminated on March 1, 2012, after WNED took over WBFO's operations. The only music programming on either WNED or WBFO were the blues blocks and A Prairie Home Companion, which had previously aired on WNED. (The latter show ended in 2016 with Garrison Keillor's retirement; neither WBFO nor WNED carried the successor program Live from Here, which ran until 2020.)

HD Radio programming

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The WBFO transmitter tower in Amherst, New York

A musical satellite feed called "Exponential" had been carried on the HD2 digital subchannel. That was replaced by a satellite-fed jazz service called "JazzWorks." In November 2021, JazzWorks was moved to 94.5 WNED-FM-HD2 to make way for "WBFO The Bridge," an adult album alternative format.[11]

A third subchannel, HD3, carried NPR news and information programs at different times than they were heard on the main channel. This was eliminated when "JazzWorks" was added to HD3.[12] On June 23, 2024, WBFO launched a Spanish language public radio format on its HD3 subchannel, branded as "Radio Bilingue".[13] Fulltime jazz programming is now heard on a subchannel of 94.5 WNED-FM.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WBFO". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "Contact WBFO". Archived from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  3. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WBFO
  4. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1963 page B-119. Retrieved Sept. 23, 2024
  5. ^ "Connection helped Filipowski land job at Channel 4". 2017-08-23.
  6. ^ "20 radio programs disappear in merger - Entertainment - the Buffalo News". Archived from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2012-03-02.
  7. ^ "WNED-AM sale to Crawford Broadcasting finalized - Life & Arts". The Buffalo News. 2012-11-29. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  8. ^ a b Pergament, Alan (February 4, 2020). "A brand change for Buffalo's public broadcasting stations embraces Canada". The Buffalo News. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  9. ^ "What is Buffalo Toronto Public Media?". WBFO. February 4, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  10. ^ "Gusto- Ultimate guide to everything Buffalo". Buffalonews.com. 2015-11-03. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  11. ^ Adult Alternative Bridge Built In Buffalo Radioinsight - November 23, 2021
  12. ^ "Find Stations". HD Radio. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  13. ^ Radio Bilingue Launches on WBFO-HD3 Radioinisight - June 23, 2024
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