WRCE

WRCE
City of license Watkins Glen, New York
Branding Classic Country 1490 WRCE
Frequency 1490 kHz
First air date 1968
Format Classic Country
Power 880 watts (unlimited)
Class C
Facility ID 49446
Transmitter coordinates 42°21′11″N 76°52′13″W / 42.35306°N 76.87028°W
Callsign meaning W RaCE (allusion to Watkins Glen International Speedway)
Former callsigns WGMF
WBZD
WTYX[1]
Owner Community Broadcasters, LLC
Sister stations WNKI, WNGZ, WPGI, WWLZ
Website WRCE Online

WRCE (1490 AM) is a radio station licensed to serve Watkins Glen, New York. The station is owned by Community Broadcasters, LLC. The station, which has historically been prone to numerous format changes in the past decade, carries a classic country format.

The station originally signed on in 1968 as WGMF,[2] a daytime-only station on 1500 kHz (the same frequency as clear channel WTOP in Washington). The station later moved to 1490 kHz to broadcast 24 hours a day; during the early 2000s, the station aired an adult standards format as WTYX. The station was assigned the WRCE call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on January 22, 2008.[1]

WRCE's tower collapsed on December 14, 2009, killing a worker and causing the station to go silent.[2] A new tower was constructed in 2010 by chief engineer Benjamin Van Patten.

From June 30 to July 4, 2011, WRCE ran a simulcast of "The Bunny", a temporary radio station run by the band Phish for their weekend long Superball IX concert festival at Watkins Glen International, also run on Sirius XM's Jam On station and the Phish website. The station had an eclectic mix of music from Phish and other artists, and had a live broadcast all eight sets of music performed by Phish over the weekend.

Along with the rest of Backyard Broadcasting's New York assets, WRCE was sold to Community Broadcasters, LLC effective August 26, 2013 at a price of $3.6 million.

Shortly after purchasing the station, Community Broadcasters ended the simulcast of WNGZ-FM and it's affiliation with the Motor Racing Network, Performance Racing Network, Indy Racing Network, and Watkins Glen International Raceway. The station carried the ESPN Radio Network for a very short period in 2014 before the station switched formats to a satellite-provided classic country formats also in 2014, which is the current format.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Fybush, Scott (2009-12-21). KDKA's Fred Honsberger Dies. NorthEast Radio Watch. Retrieved 2009-12-21.

External links