City of license | Providence, Rhode Island |
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Broadcast area | Providence metropolitan area |
Branding | News/Talk 630 WPRO and 99.7 FM |
Slogan | Rhode Island's Station of Record |
Frequency | 630 kHz |
First air date | June 15, 1924 (WKBF) December 1925 (WLSI) October 16, 1931 (as WPRO) |
Format | News/talk |
Power | 5,000 watts |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 64843 |
Callsign meaning | PROvidence |
Former callsigns | WKBF (1924-1925) WDWF (1925-1931) WLSI (1925-1931) WPAW (1932-1933; in tandem with WPRO) |
Affiliations | ABC News Radio |
Owner | Cumulus Media (Radio License Holding CBC, LLC) |
Sister stations | WEAN-FM, WPRO-FM, WPRV, WWKX, WWLI |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | 630wpro.com |
WPRO (630 AM) is a radio station located in Providence, Rhode Island. The station is owned by Cumulus Media, and airs a talk format. WPRO's studio and transmitter (along with the studios for Cumulus' other Providence stations) are located in East Providence, at the Salty Brine Broadcast Center, named after WPRO's longtime morning host. WPRO programming is also heard on WEAN-FM (99.7 FM).
WPRO's current program director is Paul Giammarco, who previously held the position at WSAR in Fall River, Massachusetts.
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The earliest ancestor to WPRO, WKBF, began broadcasting from Cranston, Rhode Island on June 15, 1924,[1] owned by Dutee W. Flint and operating at 1050 kHz;[2] in January 1925, the call letters were changed to WDWF, reflecting the owner's initials, and the station moved to 680 kHz.[3] That December, Lincoln Studios began to share ownership of the station with Flint; Lincoln broadcast its programming under the call sign WLSI.[4] WDWF and WLSI moved to 800 kHz by June 30, 1927,[5] to 1090 kHz in October,[6] to 1150 kHz in November,[7] and to 1210 kHz in February 1928.[8] By 1930, the studios for WDWF and WLSI were located in Providence.[9]
Cherry & Webb Broadcasting acquired the station in September 1931, and dropped the WDWF and WLSI call signs in favor of WPRO;[10] the station was formally relaunched on October 16.[11] The purchase made Cherry & Webb the third department store in Providence to get into radio broadcasting, after the 1922 launches of Shepard Stores' WEAN (now WPRV, a sister station to WPRO) and The Outlet Company's WJAR (now WHJJ).[12] The following February, Cherry & Webb purchased another station at 1210 kHz, WPAW in nearby Pawtucket,[13] which had been granted a license in August 1926 as WFCI, owned by Frank Cook Inc.[1] and operating at 1160 kHz,[14] moved to 1330 by June 30, 1927,[5] to 1240 that August,[15] and to 1210 in November 1928, concurrent with the change to WPAW.[16] Following the acquisition, the station used WPAW in tandem with WPRO until 1933.[17][18] The station moved to its current frequency, 630 kHz, in 1934.[19] WPRO was an affiliate of the short-lived American Broadcasting System in 1935;[20] in 1937, the station joined the CBS Radio Network, replacing charter affiliate WEAN.[21]
Although WPRO's city of license was changed from Cranston to Providence soon after Cherry & Webb took over,[13] the station's transmitter remained in Cranston[17] until its destruction in the 1938 New England hurricane;[22] it then constructed a new transmission facility in East Providence.[23] FM service was added in April 1949 with the debut of WPRO-FM (92.3 MHz),[11] and a television sister station, WPRO-TV (channel 12), went on the air March 27, 1955.[24]
Cherry & Webb exited broadcasting in April 1959, selling the WPRO stations to Capital Cities Television Corporation, which eventually became Capital Cities Communications.[11] Soon afterward, WPRO ended its CBS Radio affiliation[25] and became Providence's top-rated top 40 station, competing against WICE (now WRNI) and, later, WGNG (now WBZS).[26] The station's studios were moved to the transmitter location in East Providence in 1974; WPRO's previous studio location, which until then had also continued to house what had become WPRI-TV even after that station was sold by Capital Cities in 1967, was then donated to public television station WSBE-TV.[23] That same year, WPRO-FM adopted its own top 40 format, and the AM side began a gradual evolution to adult contemporary that would continue through the remainder of the decade.[26] During the 1980s, the station again began to shift its format by gradually adding talk shows to its schedule;[26] it also became an affiliate of ABC Radio by 1984,[27] two years before ABC was purchased by Capital Cities. WPRO discontinued its remaining music programming on March 20, 1989, moving to an all-talk format.[26]
Capital Cities/ABC sold WPRO to Tele-Media in 1993;[26] this put the station under common ownership with WLKW (the former WEAN) and WWLI. Tele-Media, in turn, sold its stations to Citadel Broadcasting in 1997.[28] WPRO added its simulcast on WEAN-FM on March 11, 2008.[29] Citadel merged with Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011.[30]
Much of WPRO's weekday lineup is locally-produced, with programs hosted by John DePetro, Dan Yorke, former Providence mayor Buddy Cianci (joined by longtime WPRO broadcaster Ron St. Pierre), and Matt Allen. The addition of Cianci's program on September 20, 2007 came after a bidding war with WHJJ. Syndicated programming includes The Savage Nation, Jerry Doyle, and Coast to Coast AM.
Weekend programming includes locally produced shows (including a Saturday morning show hosted by WJAR anchor Gene Valicenti) as well as syndicated shows such as The Mutual Fund Show with Adam Bold, Leo Laporte: The Tech Guy, Dr. Dean Edell, Meet the Press, and Bill Cunningham, .
WPRO is an affiliate of the New England Patriots Radio Network. It also carried Boston Red Sox baseball from 1986[26] to 2005; in 2006, the affiliation moved to WEEI-FM (now WVEI-FM).[31]
Frequent fill-ins on WPRO include former WLNE-TV investigative reporter Jim Hummell, State Representative Joe Trillo, and longtime fill-in Freddie Mertz.
WPRO's longest-serving on-air staff member was Salty Brine, who served as the station's morning host from 1943 until April 28, 1993.[26] Other former WPRO voices include Jimmy Gray, Holland Cooke, Gary Berkowitz, Larry Kruger, Ed Cherubino, Joe Thomas, Gary DeGraide, Davy Jones, Andy "Big Ange" Jackson, Charlie Jefferds, Jack Casey and Brother Bill Goodman. New York media personalities who previously worked at WPRO include WABC host Mark Simone, WCBS-TV correspondent Magee Hickey and WPLJ personality Dave Stewart (as David Spencer on WPRO).
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