WNYC
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WNYC | |
City of license | New York City |
---|---|
Broadcast area | New York City |
Branding | New York Public Radio |
Frequency | FM 93.9 MHz (Also on HD Radio) AM 820 kHz 93.9-2 FM for WNYC2 (Classical) 93.9-3 FM for 820 AM Simulcast |
First air date | June 22, 1922 |
Format | Public Radio |
ERP | FM: 5,400 watts AM: 10,000 watts (day), 1,000 watts (night) |
HAAT | FM: 432 meters |
Class | FM: B AM: B |
Facility ID | FM: 73355 AM: 73357 |
Transmitter Coordinates | FM: AM: |
Callsign meaning | New York City |
Affiliations | National Public Radio Public Radio International |
Owner | WNYC Radio |
Website | http://www.wnyc.org |
WNYC (93.9 FM and 820 AM) is a public radio station in New York City. Broadcasting from lower Manhattan, it is the flagship station of National Public Radio in the region and carries a mixed news and varied music format on two radio frequencies. The station is known for its nationally-syndicated news and culture programming and its Internet radio broadcasts. WNYC reaches more than one million listeners each week and has the largest public radio audience in the United States. Its AM transmitter is located in Kearny, New Jersey[1]; its FM transmitter is located in New York City.[2]
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[edit] Programming
WNYC produces 100 hours a week of its own programming, including nationally-syndicated shows like Studio 360, On the Media and Radio Lab, as well as local news and interview shows like The Leonard Lopate Show, Soundcheck and The Brian Lehrer Show. Because the entire schedule is streamed on the internet, the local shows can be heard almost live throughout the nation and those shows have received calls from far-flung states. It has a local news team of 18 journalists.
Studio 360 is a weekly one-hour program about arts and culture hosted by Kurt Andersen, the former editor of Spy Magazine. Taking current issues and trends as jumping-off points, the show explores a broad range of cultural ideas. Each program begins with a topical section of stories about the arts and culture from around the United States and around the world.
On The Media is a weekly one-hour program hosted by Brooke Gladstone and Bob Garfield of Advertising Age covering the media and its effect on American culture and society. Many stories investigate how events of the past week were covered. Stories also regularly cover such topics as video news releases, net neutrality, media consolidation, censorship, freedom of the press, spin, and how the media is changing with technology.
The Brian Lehrer Show is a two-hour weekday talk show covering local and national current events and social issues hosted by Brian Lehrer, a former anchor and reporter for NBC Radio Network.
The Leonard Lopate Show is a two-hour weekday talk show hosted by Leonard Lopate, a painter who studied with Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko and the brother of writer Phillip Lopate. The show covers a broad range of topics including jazz and gospel music, literature, science and history.
Soundcheck is a one-hour weekday talk show hosted by John Schaefer about music and the arts. The show features interviews with musicians, critics, journalists, authors and others. It also features live musical performances in mix of genres, including indie rock, jazz, classical, and world music.
WNYC broadcasts the major daily news programs produced by National Public Radio, including Morning Edition and All Things Considered, as well as the BBC World Service and programs from Public Radio International like This American Life and A Prairie Home Companion.
The station airs many long-running cultural and music programs, including Folksong Festival on Saturday nights that has survived battles with mayors and blacklists. Hosted by Oscar Brand, who debuted the show on December 10, 1945, and who was blacklisted in the McCarthy era, the show was one of the first radio programs in the United States to focus on issues of homosexuality and continues to shake up audiences with anti-American Revolution programs, "bad daddy" shows for Father's Day, "Evil Mothers" for Mother's Day, and more. Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Woody Guthrie, Arlo Guthrie, Huddie Ledbetter, and Pete Seeger all made their debuts on the show.
In 2006 the station began WNYC2, an all-classical music channel broadcast on High Definition radio and the Internet. The station's AM and FM channels carry primarily news and information programming on weekdays but maintain different broadcast schedules. The FM signal broadcasts musical programming after 7 p.m. It eliminated much of its weekday classical music programming in 2001[1], following the advice of consultants[2] and the example of many other public radio stations such as Philadelphia's WHYY.
Locally-produced programs include:
- Big Band Sounds - music from the 1920s to the 1950s
- Concerts from the Frick Collection - New York debuts of nationally and internationally acclaimed classical musicians in partnership with the Frick Collection
- Evening Music with David Garland - draws from the full history of classical music, sometimes emphasizing a particular composer, instrument, or compositional approach
- Folksong Festival - devoted to the traditional and contemporary folksong
- The Infinite Mind - examines scientific, existential, and social issues concerning the human mind with brain researcher Dr. Fred Goodwin
- Jonathan Schwartz - American Popular Standards, classical music, rock, and jazz
- Mad About Music - explores the emotional power of music on the lives of celebrities through interviews and hand-picked recordings
- New Sounds - guest musicians from David Byrne to Meredith Monk to Ravi Shankar, presents performances and premieres new works from the classic and operatic to folk and jazz
- The No Show - features music, satire, news commentary and comedy with Steve Post
- Radio Lab - each episode is a patchwork of people, sounds, stories and experiences centered around one idea
- Selected Shorts - actors read contemporary and classic short fiction, ranging from Chekhov, Maupassant, Malamud, and Singer, to Jhumpa Lahiri and Jonathan Franzen
- Soundcheck - daily talk show about music covering all musical genres, the show focuses on the musical passions of performers, composers, and critics as well as the public radio audience
- Spinning On Air - specializes in unusual, uncategorizeable music, with an emphasis on in-studio performances
- The Takeaway - a weekday morning show co-produced with Public Radio International[3]
[edit] Listenership and New Media
WNYC, comprising WNYC 93.9 FM, WNYC AM 820 and WNYC2, is the most-listened to commercial or non-commercial radio station in Manhattan. It ranks 13th citywide, however, in competition with salsa, hip-hop and light FM, according to the radio ratings service Arbitron. WNYC had 99,378 paying members in 2006, up from 78,866 in 2001. With more than than one million unique listeners each week, WNYC has the largest audience of any public radio station in the United States. In 2005, the station won an award for recording the highest audience growth among non-commercial stations in the previous five years.
WNYC has been an early adopter of new technologies including HD radio, live audio streaming, and podcasting. RSS feeds and email newsletters link to archived audio of individual program segments. WNYC2 is a classical station that is delivered only via Internet and HD radio, 24 hours a day. WNYC also makes some of its programming available on satellite radio.
[edit] History
Funds for the establishment of WNYC were approved on June 2, 1922 by the New York City Board of Estimate and Apportionment. The AM station made its first official broadcast two years later on July 8, 1924. WNYC is one of the oldest radio stations in the United States. It first began broadcasting on 570 AM with a second-hand transmitter shipped from Brazil. The FM station was added in 1943. In 1989 WNYC AM switched from 830 on the dial at 1,000 watts to 820 with 10,000 watts during daylight hours and 1,000 at night[3]. Both stations were established and owned by the City of New York until 1997, when they were bought by private citizens through the newly-formed independent WNYC Foundation to continue the public radio mission of the stations.
WNYC radio personalities include Margaret Juntwait, an announcer and classical music host at WNYC for 15 years who left for the Metropolitan Opera in September 2006. She is now the announcer for the Met's Saturday Afternoon Radio Broadcasts and is only the third regular announcer of the long-standing broadcast series launched in 1931, and is also the first woman to hold the position. John Schaefer, a music show host at WNYC for 20 years, has written liner notes for more than 100 albums, for everyone from Yo-Yo Ma to Terry Riley and was named a "New York influential" by New York Magazine.
[edit] Early years
WNYC's history has been pioneering. H. V. Kaltenborn hosted radio's first quiz program on WNYC in 1926, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle's "Current Events Bee", a forerunner to shows like National Public Radio's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! In its early years the station lacked funds for a record library and would borrow albums from record stores around the Municipal Building, where its studios were located. Legend has it, a listener began loaning classical records to the station and in 1929, WNYC began broadcast of Masterwork Hour, radio's first program of recorded classical music. Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia made use of the station every Sunday in his Talk to the People program.
[edit] Great Depression and World War II
The station's transmitter was moved in 1937 as part of a WPA project and the next year the Municipal Broadcasting System was created. Under the leadership of its director, Morris S. Novik, WNYC became a model public broadcaster. Among its many landmark programs was the annual American Music Festival. On December 7, 1941 WNYC was the first radio station in the United States to announce the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
[edit] Independence from the City
The station's ownership by the city meant that it was occasionally subject to the whims of various mayors. As part of a crackdown on prostitution in the 1980s, Mayor Ed Koch tried to use WNYC to broadcast the names of "johns" arrested for soliciting. Announcers threatened a walkout and station management refused to comply with the idea; after one broadcast the idea was abandoned.
In 1995, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani split WNYC from its sister television station, and a risk arose that the radio stations would be sold off to corporate interests. In 1997 the station was saved by its sale to the nonprofit WNYC Foundation. This put an end to the occasional political intrusions of the past. The station's listenership and budget have continued to grow rapidly in recent years.
[edit] September 11, 2001
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 destroyed WNYC's FM transmitter atop the World Trade Center. The station's studios, in the nearby Municipal Building, had to be evacuated and station staff could not return to their offices for three weeks. The FM signal was knocked off the air for a time. WNYC temporarily moved its offices to the studios at National Public Radio's New York bureau in midtown Manhattan, where it broadcast on its still operating AM signal transmitting from a tower in New Jersey and by a live Internet stream. The station eventually returned to the Municipal Building.
[edit] Move to new studios
In early 2008, WNYC will move from its 51,400 square feet (4,780 m²) of rent-free space scattered on eight floors of the Manhattan Municipal Building to a new location at 160 Varick Street near the Holland Tunnel. The station will occupy two and a half floors of a 12-story former printing building.
The new offices have 12-foot (4 m) ceilings and 71,900 square feet (6,680 m²) of space. The number of recording studios and booths has doubled, to 31. There is a new 140-seat, street-level studio for live broadcasts, concerts and public forums and an expansion of the newsroom for a capacity of up to 40 journalists.
Renovation, construction, rent and operating costs for the new Varick Street location amounted to $45 million. In addition to raising these funds, WNYC has been raising money for a one-time fund of $12.5 million to cover the cost of creating 40 more hours of new programming and three new shows. The total cost of $57.5 million for both the move and programming is nearly three times the $20 million the station had to raise over seven years to buy its licenses from the City in 1997.[4]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- WNYC web site
- WNYC Flickr photo page
- Short WNYC News Historical Profile (1978)
- Publicradiofan.com listing of all public radio station including WNYC
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WNYC
- Radio Locator information on WNYC
- Query Arbitron's FM station database for WNYC
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WNYC
- Radio Locator Information on WNYC
- Query Arbitron's AM station database for WNYC
- WNYC (New York Public Radio) Broadcast Schedule
- WNYC 80th Anniversary Timeline (2004)
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