WYSL
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| WYSL | |
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| City of license | Avon, New York |
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| Broadcast area | Genesee River Valley |
| Branding | "News Power 1040" |
| Slogan | "Whistle" |
| Frequency | 1040 (kHz) |
| First air date | 1987 |
| Format | News/Talk/Sports |
| Power | 20,000 watts day, 500 watts night |
| Class | B |
| Callsign meaning | Your Sports Leader |
| Affiliations | Talk Radio Network ABC News Radio Westwood One |
| Owner | Robert Savage and Judith Day, dba Radio Livingston |
| Webcast | WarpRadio |
| Website | WYSL1040.com |
WYSL is a radio broadcasting station in Avon, New York. Broadcasting at 1040 kHz on the AM dial, the station is owned by Robert C. Savage and Judith A. Day under the name Radio Livingston and serves Livingston County and the Rochester metropolitan area.
WYSL streams its programming on the Internet.
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[edit] History
The call letters for WYSL were taken from a radio station in Buffalo which had used the same calls (that station is now known as WWWS). Savage launched an all-news format in 1987 on 1030 kHz as a daytime-only station, but would later move to the 1040 frequency to broadcast 24 hours per day.
Historically the station was an all-news radio format with both local content and programming from the Associated Press. The all-news format, however, would end in 2006 for a number of reasons. First, the Associated Press discontinued its radio services in July 2005. WYSL replaced the network with CNN Headline News, the only other national commercial all-news outlet available. After that, however, CNNHN decided to launch "Headline Prime," which effectively eliminated its viability as an all-news network between the hours of 7 PM and 2 AM ET (later expanded through the entire overnight). This left a large hole in the schedule. Third, the Rochester market's "second-tier" news talker, WROC 950, had been replaced by a progressive talk format and had locked up the area's CBS Radio Network affiliation.
As a result, WYSL picked up conservative talkers Laura Ingraham and Bill O'Reilly from the former WROC lineup and added Rusty Humphries and Jerry Doyle from Talk Radio Network to fill in the late evening gap, thereby transforming the station into a news-talker.
WYSL shares some news staff with another small station, WSPQ in Springville, which the station refers to as its "Western New York bureau." WYSL is also affilitated with ABC News Radio and the Wall Street Journal Radio Network.
WYSL increased its power from 2,500 watts to 20,000 watts in November of 2006.
[edit] Programming changes in 2007
WYSL continued to transition into a full-time talk radio station in 2007. Early in 2007, the station added its first local talk show, hosted by local attorney Bill Nojay, as well as picking up Dennis Miller in the afternoon drive time slot. The CNN Headline News affiliation was completely dropped by June 2007 and replaced by Jim Bohannon while Jim Quinn's syndicated The War Room with Quinn and Rose was picked up in the morning drive, thus eliminating the last "all news" programming block on the station, in October 2007. Nojay's show began syndication in 2008 on WLEA in Hornell.
Savage is in the process of applying for a sister station for WYSL, which will operate at 1220 kHz and be licensed to Lakeville, New York. The new station will operate from the same tower site as WYSL.
[edit] Conflict with HD Radio
Savage has been a vocal opponent of the new HD Radio technology being used on the AM band, saying that the technology causes undue interference and unnecessary broadcast delay for minimal gain in quality.[1][2]. He has since filed a formal complaint with the Federal Communications Commission over interference caused by WBZ's nighttime HD signal on the adjacent 1030 kHz frequency[3], from which Savage had moved many years earlier to avoid that interference when his station went to a 24-hour broadcast schedule.
[edit] Programs
[edit] Weekdays
- Local news updates are heard throughout the day.
- Simulcast of WHEC, 5:00-6:00 AM
- The War Room with Quinn and Rose, 6 AM- 9 AM
- Laura Ingraham, 9 AM-12 noon
- Simulcast of WHEC, 12 noon-12:10 PM
- The Radio Factor with Bill O'Reilly, 12:10-2 PM
- Bill Nojay, 2-3 PM (encore 8-9 PM)
- Dennis Miller, 3-5 PM
- Simulcast of WHEC, 5-6:30 PM
- Various paid and other programs 6:30-8:00 PM
- Rusty Humphries, 9 PM-12 midnight (break for WHEC news 11-11:30 PM)
- Jerry Doyle, 12 midnight-2 AM
- Jim Bohannon, 2-5 AM
[edit] Weekends
- Tammy Bruce, Saturdays 7-10 PM
- Various local college and minor league sports
[edit] Slogans
The station uses the slogans "Whistle", a pun on its call letters, "News Power 1040" and "The News Station". The "News Power" Slogan was introduced in 2006.
[edit] See also
- WHEC-TV
- WHAM-AM (Main Competitor)
- CNN Headline News
- The Wall Street Journal
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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