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{{hatnote|For transmitting stations formerly known as WEBR, see [[WEBR (disambiguation)]].}}
{{hatnote|For transmitting stations formerly known as WEBR, see [[WEBR (disambiguation)]]}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2024}}

{{Infobox radio station
{{Infobox radio station
| name = WEBR
| name = WEBR
| logo = WEBR AM 1440 logo.png
| logo = File:WEBR.png
| logo_size = 200px
| logo_size =
| city = [[Niagara Falls, New York]]
| city = [[Niagara Falls, New York]]
| area = [[Western New York]]
| area = [[Buffalo-Niagara Falls metropolitan area]]
| branding = WEBR AM 1440 and webrradio.com
| branding = AM 1440–FM 105.3 WEBRRadio.com
| frequency = 1440 [[kHz]]
| frequency = 1440 [[kHz]]
| translators = {{Radio Relay|105.3|W287CV|[[Lockport, New York|Lockport]]}}
| repeater =
| airdate = [[1947 in radio|1947]]
| airdate = {{start date and age|1947|12|21}}
| format = [[Middle of the road (music)|MOR]]/[[Adult contemporary music|gold AC]]
| format = [[Oldies|Soft Oldies]]
| power = 1,000 [[watt]]s day<br>55 [[watt]]s night
| power = {{ubl|1,000 watts (day)|55 watts (night)}}
| erp =
| class = D
| licensing_authority = [[Federal Communications Commission|FCC]]
| haat =
| class = D
| facility_id = 39517
| coordinates = {{coord|43|4|43.00|N|79|0|40.00|W|region:US-NY_type:landmark}}
| facility_id = 39517
| callsign_meaning = "We Extend Buffalo's Regards"
| coordinates = {{coord|43|4|43.00|N|79|0|40.00|W|region:US_type:city}}
| former_callsigns = WJJL (1947–2020)
| callsign_meaning = '''W'''e '''E'''xtend '''B'''uffalo’s '''R'''egards (originally on [[WDCZ|AM 970]])
| affiliations = [[NBC News Radio]]
| former_callsigns = WJJL (1947–2020)
| owner = William Yuhnke
| affiliations = [[NBC News Radio]]
| owner = William Yuhnke
| licensee = Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.
| sister_stations = [[WLVL]]
| licensee = Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.
| webcast = {{Listen live|https://s3.radio.co/s99c3ad220/listen}}
| sister_stations =
| webcast = [https://s3.radio.co/s99c3ad220/listen Listen Live]
| website = {{URL|https://webrradio.com/}}
| website = [http://www.webrradio.com/ WEBRradio.com]
}}
}}


'''WEBR''' (1440 [[AM broadcasting|AM]]) is a [[radio station]] that broadcasts a [[middle of the road (music)|middle-of-the-road music]] format. Licensed to [[Niagara Falls, New York]], United States, the station serves the Niagara Falls area from studios in [[Kenmore, New York|Kenmore]]. The station is currently owned by William Yuhnke, through licensee Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/fmq?call=WEBR |title=WEBR Facility Record |work=United States [[Federal Communications Commission]], audio division }}</ref>
'''WEBR''' (1440 [[kHz]]) is an [[AM broadcasting|AM]] [[commercial radio]] station [[city of license|licensed]] to [[Niagara Falls, New York]]. It serves the [[Buffalo–Niagara Falls metropolitan area]] from studios on Kenmore Avenue in [[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo]]. The station is currently owned by William Yuhnke, with the license held by Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/fmq?call=WEBR |title=WEBR Facility Record |work=United States [[Federal Communications Commission]], audio division }}</ref> It broadcasts a [[full-service radio|full-service]] [[oldies|soft oldies]] [[radio format]], mostly from the 1970s. On weekends, it airs programs featuring [[music of Poland|Polish]] and [[music of Italy|Italian music]], [[oldies]] and [[adult standards]] shows.

By day, WEBR transmits with 1,000 watts of power, using a [[omnidirectional antenna|non-directional]] antenna pattern. At night, to avoid interfering with other stations on [[1440 AM]], power is reduced to 55 watts. The [[transmitter]] is on Buffalo Avenue ([[New York State Route 384|NY State Route 384]]) in Niagara Falls, near South Hyde Park Boulevard.<ref>[https://radio-locator.com/info/WEBR-AM?loc=42.90041%2C-78.67303&locn=Lancaster%2C%20New%20York Radio-Locator.com/WEBR]</ref>


==History==
==History==
===As WJJL===
===As WJJL===
[[File:WJJL logo.jpg|200px|thumb|left|WJJL's logo during the ownership of M.J. Phillips (1990s to 2019).]] WEBR originally went on the air as '''WJJL''' (after its founding owner John J. Laux) in December 1947, and it serves Western [[New York (state)|New York]] and Southern [[Ontario]], [[Canada]].
[[File:WJJL logo.jpg|thumb|WJJL's logo during the ownership of M.J. Phillips (1990s to 2019).]]
On {{start date and age|1947|12|21}}, the station [[signed on]] as WJJL. The [[call sign]] represented the initials of its founding owner, John J. Laux. The station was originally a [[daytimer]], required to go off the air at sunset.


In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Canadian native Thomas Talbot worked for Laux as a salesperson at the station. Eventually, Talbot became sales manager and then owner of WJJL, which was incorporated as the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corp. He also owned WBNY (now [[WMSX]]) in Buffalo.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Canadian native Thomas Talbot worked for Laux as a salesperson at the station. Eventually, Talbot became sales manager and then owner of WJJL, which was incorporated as the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corp. He also owned [[FM radio]] station 96.1 WBNY (now [[WTSS]]) in Buffalo.


Talbot began one of the first radio “two-way” [[telephone]] talk shows in the United States in the early 1950s, which was called ''Party Line''. There was an eight-second delay in order to avoid potential problem calls.
Talbot began one of the first radio "two-way" telephone talk shows in the United States in the early 1950s, which was called ''Party Line''. There was an eight-second delay to avoid potential problem calls.


The mid-morning show was renamed ''Viewpoint'' in the 1960s and continues to be hosted by longtime Niagara Falls fixture and former news director Tom Darro.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/news-articles/buffalo-news/mi_8030/is_20090524/host-likes-listen-callers/ai_n43029216/ |title=Talk show host likes to listen to callers | work=Buffalo News | first=Louise |last=Continelli |date=2009-05-24}}</ref>
The mid-morning show was named ''Viewpoint'' in the 1960s and continues to be hosted by longtime Niagara Falls fixture and former news director Tom Darro.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/news-articles/buffalo-news/mi_8030/is_20090524/host-likes-listen-callers/ai_n43029216/ |title=Talk show host likes to listen to callers | work=Buffalo News | first=Louise |last=Continelli |date=May 24, 2009}}</ref>


Talbot died in 1976, and the station was taken over by his widow, Norma Talbot.
Talbot died in 1976, and the station was taken over by his widow, Norma Talbot.


An 18-year-old aspiring [[country music]]ian named [[Ramblin' Lou Schriver]] was one of the station's first on-air personalities; he eventually earned fame in the Buffalo area and bought his own station, [[WXRL]], in 1970.<ref>http://buffalo.com/2016/01/18/featured/138184/{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
An 18-year-old aspiring [[country music]]ian named [[Ramblin' Lou Schriver]] was one of the station's early on-air personalities. In 1970, he bought his own station, [[WXRL]] [[1300 AM]], in [[Lancaster, New York]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kunz Goldman |first1=Mary |title=Ramblin' Lou Schriver, soul of country music in WNY, has died |url=http://buffalo.com/2016/01/18/featured/138184-ramblin-lou-has-died/ |newspaper=Buffalo News |date=January 19, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160126210031/http://buffalo.com/2016/01/18/featured/138184-ramblin-lou-has-died/ |archive-date=January 26, 2016}}</ref>


In WJJL’s heyday, the station was locally-programmed for Niagara Falls with a full line-up of live, local personalities and a local news department, which covered Niagara Falls, New York and the surrounding [[Niagara County]].
In WJJL's heyday, the station was locally programmed for Niagara Falls with a full line-up of live, local personalities. An active news department covered Niagara Falls and the surrounding [[Niagara County]].


The station aired a number of live ethnic and specialty programs on weekends, including the Spanish language ''Ecos Borincanos'' program aimed at the Puerto Rican community - which enjoyed a 40-year run, the Italian ''Mattinata D’Oro'' and ''Pit Stop'' for auto-racing fans. Later, the Italian ''Casa Rico'', the nation’s longest running ethnic language program moved to WJJL, and it continues today on WEBR. (After Rico's retirement, the show was renamed "Italian Gold" with Tony Occhiuto as host).
The station aired a number of live ethnic and specialty programs on weekends. They included the Spanish language ''Ecos Borincanos'' program aimed at the [[Puerto Rico|Puerto Rican]] community, which enjoyed a 40-year run, along with the Italian ''Mattinata D'Oro'' and ''Pit Stop'' for auto-racing fans. Later, ''Casa Rico'', the nation's longest running Italian language program, moved to WJJL, and it continues today on WEBR, renamed "Italian Gold" with Tony Occhiuto as host.


===Former personalities===
WJJL was a launching pad for many future top talents. These include former News Director and ''Viewpoint'' host Dave McKinley, now an Emmy Award-winning reporter for WGRZ-TV in Buffalo. [[John Murphy (announcer)|John Murphy]], the current radio voice of the Buffalo Bills, worked there early in his career, as did long-time WMSX/Buffalo Morning Host Joe Chile, and national voice-over artist Jeff Laurence. Former [[WGN Radio]]-Chicago VP/General Manager [[Tom Langmyer]] worked there as a summer fill-in personality, news reporter and anchor while in college.
WJJL was a launching pad for many future top talents. These include former News Director and ''Viewpoint'' host Dave McKinley, later an [[Emmy Award]]-winning reporter for [[WGRZ-TV]] 2 in Buffalo. [[John Murphy (announcer)|John Murphy]], the radio voice of [[Buffalo Bills]] [[NFL|football]], worked there early in his career, as did long-time [[WTSS|WJYE/WMSX]] Morning Host Joe Chille, and national voice-over artist (and [[WTWW]] shortwave personality) Jeff Laurence. Former [[WGN Radio]]-Chicago VP/general manager [[Tom Langmyer]] worked there as a summer fill-in personality, news reporter and anchor while in college.


Other noted WJJL alumni include George “Hound Dog” Lorenz, Barry Lillis, Dorothy Shank, WBEN Buffalo talk show host Tom Bauerle, WBFO Buffalo Reporter Dave Debo, Tony Magoo, John Jarrett, Jon Park, David J. Miller, Bob O'Neil, WKBW-TV Buffalo Anchor Melanie Pritchard, WGR Buffalo’s Howard Simon, former WIVB-TV Buffalo personality Craig Nigrelli and Cumulus Media Networks, [[Red Eye Radio]], Nationally Syndicated Talk Host and former WBEN Talk Host [[Gary McNamara]].
Other noted WJJL alumni include George "Hound Dog" Lorenz, Barry Lillis, Dorothy Shank, WBEN Buffalo talk show host Tom Bauerle, WBFO Buffalo Reporter Dave Debo, Tony Magoo, John Jarrett, Jon Park, David J. Miller, Bob O'Neil, WKBW-TV Buffalo Anchor Melanie Pritchard, WGR Buffalo's Howard Simon, former WIVB-TV Buffalo personality Craig Nigrelli and Cumulus Media Networks, [[Red Eye Radio]], Nationally Syndicated Talk Host and former WBEN Talk Host [[Gary McNamara]]. Local, national and satellite radio star Zig Fracassi interned there.


===Changing ownership===
The Talbot family sold WJJL to M.J. Phillips, who owned the station from the 1990s until 2020 and operated it as an oldies music station. Unlike other oldies stations, WJJL maintained its focus on 1950s and early 1960s music throughout Phillips's ownership, resisting the [[channel drift|format drift]] to [[classic hits]] that most other oldies stations experienced. In the 21st century, Phillips encountered financial problems (for a time he was listed as a [[debtor in possession]] of the WJJL license) and frequently tangled with a [[vexatious litigation|vexatious litigant]] named Joann who made repeated false filings with the FCC in a failed attempt to wrest control of the station from Phillips.
The Talbot family sold WJJL to M.J. Phillips, who owned the station from the 1990s until 2020 and operated it as an oldies music station. Unlike other oldies stations, WJJL maintained its focus on 1950s and early 1960s music throughout Phillips's ownership, resisting the [[channel drift|format drift]] to [[classic hits]] that most other oldies stations experienced. In the 21st century, Phillips encountered financial problems (for a time he was listed as a [[debtor in possession]] of the WJJL license) and frequently tangled with a [[vexatious litigant]] named Joann who made repeated false filings with the FCC in a failed attempt to wrest control of the station from Phillips.<ref>[https://www.fybush.com/NERW/2007/070702/nerw.html NorthEast Radio Watch: July 7, 2007] "There's no possible way that "Joann Nicola Lutz Distefano Phillips" is getting the license of WJJL (1440 Niagara Falls), either. It's been a couple of years since someone using that name and claiming to be the ex-wife of the station's owner began posting on message boards (harmlessly) and filing renewal applications with the FCC (not so harmlessly), and it's taken that long for the Commission to figure out what most of us have known for a while: the only legitimate renewal application that was filed for WJJL was the one filed in February 2006 by the real licensee, M.J. Phillips. Next question: will Phillips, or the FCC, take any action against the "Joann" applicant for the fraudulent application, which certainly must have cost some legal time, if nothing else, for Phillips."</ref>


After WJJL’s Niagara Falls offices and studios were destroyed in a fire in 1999, Phillips moved the station to West Seneca, a Buffalo suburb, which is 30 miles from Niagara Falls.
After WJJL's Niagara Falls offices and studios were destroyed in a fire in 1999, Phillips moved the station to West Seneca, a Buffalo suburb, which is 30 miles from Niagara Falls.


In 2009, WJJL's morning show began broadcasting from a satellite studio in the Niagara Arts and Cultural Center in Niagara Falls.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.buffalonews.com/moneysmart/2009/06/summit-mall-merchants-find-new-homes.html |title=Summit Mall Merchants Find New Homes |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708104225/http://blogs.buffalonews.com/moneysmart/2009/06/summit-mall-merchants-find-new-homes.html |archivedate=2011-07-08 }}</ref> WJJL also carried a daily talk show by former mayor Vince Anello, following Anello's 2011 release from prison for corruption, which continued after the format flip to WEBR until Anello's 2021 death.<ref>https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/former-mayor-vince-anello-remembered/article_fa54fe2f-6b91-5823-a5d1-359a6aaf35b9.html</ref>
In 2009, WJJL's morning show began broadcasting from a satellite studio in the Niagara Arts and Cultural Center in Niagara Falls.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.buffalonews.com/moneysmart/2009/06/summit-mall-merchants-find-new-homes.html |title=Summit Mall Merchants Find New Homes |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708104225/http://blogs.buffalonews.com/moneysmart/2009/06/summit-mall-merchants-find-new-homes.html |archive-date=July 8, 2011 }}</ref> WJJL also carried a daily talk show by former mayor Vince Anello, following Anello's 2011 release from prison for corruption, which continued after the format flip to WEBR until Anello's 2021 death.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/former-mayor-vince-anello-remembered/article_fa54fe2f-6b91-5823-a5d1-359a6aaf35b9.html |title = Former Mayor Vince Anello remembered {{!}} Local News {{!}} niagara-gazette.com}}</ref>


From 2000 to 2009, WJJL broadcast weekly games of the City of Buffalo Public School's Harvard Cup football league. The Harvard Cup championship was traditionally played [[American football on Thanksgiving|on Thanksgiving]]. WJJL continued its weekly coverage of Western New York High School Football with a “Game of the Week, focusing on the teams of the former Harvard Cup League.<ref>[http://www.buffalonews.com/sports/high-schools/article590464.ece City broadcasts, sadly, will be silenced]. ''The Buffalo News''. Retrieved October 12, 2011.</ref>
From 2000 to 2009, WJJL broadcast weekly games of the City of Buffalo Public School's Harvard Cup football league. The Harvard Cup championship was traditionally played [[American football on Thanksgiving|on Thanksgiving]]. WJJL continued its weekly coverage of Western New York High School Football with a "Game of the Week," focusing on the teams of the former Harvard Cup League. The games featured Rich Kozak as play by play man with Hall of Fame Coach Art Serotte as color analyst. Roger Weiss served as guest analyst and half-time host and "Dr." John Pluta was the sideline reporter. The broadcasts also featured Sean Bruso and Chuck Dockery. The broadcasts helped to foster the Harvard Cup Hall of Fame and HarvardCup.com as the first dedicated website devoted exclusively to high school coverage on the Western New York area.<ref>[http://www.buffalonews.com/sports/high-schools/article590464.ece City broadcasts, sadly, will be silenced]. ''The Buffalo News''. Retrieved October 12, 2011.</ref>


===As WEBR===
===As WEBR===
====Adult standards and MOR period====
In 2020, Phillips sold the station to William Yuhnke, who re-launched the station's online presence and began streaming the station on the Internet.<ref>https://radioinsight.com/headlines/185218/station-sales-week-of-3-13-usa-radio-network-head-adds-philly-translator/</ref> Yuhnke owns Liberty Yellow Cab, a [[taxicab]] service in the Buffalo area.<ref>https://news.wbfo.org/post/cab-company-says-customers-drivers-who-switched-ride-hailing-are-coming-back</ref> One of Phillips's minority partners, Jeffrey Lazroe, sued the station shortly after the sale.<ref>Connelly, Patrick (September 1, 2020). [lawsuit-radio-station-part-owner-lazroe-not-told.html Rebranded Buffalo radio station WEBR-AM faces lawsuit from former part-owner] ''Buffalo Business First''. Retrieved July 12, 2021.</ref> The station also faces issues with its transmitter, which sits on the property of Superior Lubricants in Niagara Falls, a property that is set to be repurposed; Yuhnke is hoping to find a new site in Niagara Falls but is also talking with interests in [[North Tonawanda, New York|North Tonawanda]].<ref>Genco, Joseph (March 1, 2021). [https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/webr-may-signal-move-in-falls/article_ce464e7b-0af0-5a0a-887f-1d25cddfdf6a.html WEBR may signal move in Falls]. ''Niagara Gazette''. Retrieved July 12, 2021.</ref>
[[File:Liberty Cab Company and WEBR radio studios, Kenmore Avenue, Buffalo, New York - 20220910.jpg|thumb|WEBR's studio building on Kenmore Avenue in Buffalo, which it has occupied since 2020.]]
In 2020, Phillips sold the station to William Yuhnke, who re-launched the station's online presence and began streaming the station on the Internet.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://radioinsight.com/headlines/185218/station-sales-week-of-3-13-usa-radio-network-head-adds-philly-translator/ |title = Station Sales Week Of 3/13: USA Radio Network Head Adds Philly Translator – RadioInsight}}</ref> Yuhnke owns Liberty Yellow Cab, a [[taxicab]] service in the Buffalo area.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://news.wbfo.org/post/cab-company-says-customers-drivers-who-switched-ride-hailing-are-coming-back |title = Cab company says customers, drivers who switched to ride-hailing are coming back {{!}} WBFO}}</ref> One of Phillips's minority partners, Jeffrey Lazroe, sued the station shortly after the sale.<ref>Connelly, Patrick (September 1, 2020). [lawsuit-radio-station-part-owner-lazroe-not-told.html Rebranded Buffalo radio station WEBR-AM faces lawsuit from former part-owner] ''Buffalo Business First''. Retrieved July 12, 2021.</ref> The station also faces issues with its transmitter, which sits on the property of Superior Lubricants in Niagara Falls, a property that is set to be repurposed; Yuhnke is hoping to find a new site in Niagara Falls but is also talking with interests in [[North Tonawanda]].<ref>Genco, Joseph (March 1, 2021). [https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/webr-may-signal-move-in-falls/article_ce464e7b-0af0-5a0a-887f-1d25cddfdf6a.html WEBR may signal move in Falls]. ''Niagara Gazette''. Retrieved July 12, 2021.</ref>

On July 3, 2020, WJJL changed its format to [[adult standards]] ending the station's decades-long oldies format. It changed its call sign on July 4, 2020, to WEBR, the former call-letters at [[WLVL|AM 1340]], [[WDCZ|AM 970]] and [[WNED-FM|FM 94.5]] in Buffalo. The WEBR call letters were previously used in Buffalo from 1924 until 1993. Don Angelo, a longtime radio programmer and former part-owner of [[WBBZ-TV]], began as general manager. The format change marked the return of adult standards to the Niagara Frontier for the first time since [[WECK]] dropped the format in 2017. Oldies occupy a six-hour block on Sunday afternoons, four of those hours hosted locally by John Farley, and the other two filled by [[Wink Martindale]]'s [[radio syndication|syndicated]] revival of ''[[The History of Rock and Roll]]''.


The station added a morning show hosted by Gail Ann Huber (a Buffalo radio veteran with experience at WECK, WHTT, and [[WYRK]]) and Bob Stilson (formerly at [[WBEN (AM)|WBEN]] and [[WKBW-TV]]). Other WEBR hosts at the time of launch included Tom Darro (carrying over his talk show from WJJL), original 1970s-era WEBR jockey Jack Horohoe with the "Midday Coffee,"<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.wkbw.com/news/local-news/hes-back-on-the-radio-after-a-49-year-hiatus |title = He's back on the radio after a 49-year hiatus}}</ref> and Barry Lillis with the "Make Believe Dance Floor." (Lillis, a WJJL alumnus most famous for his work as [[WGRZ]]'s weather anchor, returned to broadcasting after over 20 years out of the field). Horohoe unexpectedly died a few months into his second tenure on the station,<ref>{{cite web | url-access=limited |archive-url = https://ghostarchive.org/iarchive/facebook/229741647060351/3755040027863811 |archive-date = April 30, 2022| url = https://www.facebook.com/wbbztv/posts/3755040027863811 |title = WBBZ TV {{!}} Buffalo's Buzz on Facebook |via=Facebook}}{{cbignore}}{{User-generated source|certain=yes|date=March 2022}}</ref> while Lillis left the station after one year. (He stated that the format tweak that year, while he was "OK" with the music change, had also led to him losing creative control over his show; he was unwilling to [[voice-tracking|voice-track]] a show in which he had incorporated audience interaction and [[radio drama|theater of the mind]].)<ref>{{cite web|last=Critic|first=News TV|title=Barry Lillis explains exit from WEBR; local woman in danger on 'Big Brother'|url=https://buffalonews.com/entertainment/television/barry-lillis-explains-exit-from-webr-local-woman-in-danger-on-big-brother/article_bdc5bc9e-f066-11eb-bf9b-6bf117206169.html|access-date=December 23, 2021|website=The Buffalo News|language=en}}</ref> Lillis would return in a weekend position in late 2022. [[WHTT]] jock Tony Venturoli joined the station shortly after Lillis's departure, hosting a [[classic hits]] themed block. Al Wallack, who hosted ''Jazz in the Nighttime'' on the original WEBR, reprised the show on Sunday afternoons on the current incarnation during its first few months of operation.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.buffalobroadcasters.com/webr-am-returns-to-airwaves/ |title = WEBR-AM Returns to Airwaves - Buffalo Broadcasters Association}}</ref> Huber left the station near the end of 2022, with Kelly Wahl taking over afternoon drive. Dave Gillen, whose credits include time at 102.5 (now [[WBKV]]) and co-founding the [[World's Largest Disco]], served as program director and fill-in host.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.buffalobroadcasters.com/webr-am-names-program-director-pair-of-departures-at-wivb-tv/ |title = WEBR-AM Names Program Director, Pair of Departures at WIVB-TV - Buffalo Broadcasters Association}}</ref> Gillen departed the station amid controversy and a lawsuit by former operations manager Nancy Freeman, who accused Gillen of sexual harassment and WEBR of retaliating against her.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Buffalo's WEBR Hit With $1 Million Suit By Former Operations Manager. |url=https://www.insideradio.com/free/buffalo-s-webr-hit-with-1-million-suit-by-former-operations-manager/article_a71be5ea-8b29-11ed-a802-23bff1b0f9f4.html |access-date=February 6, 2023 |website=Insideradio.com |language=en}}</ref> Additional programming included a weekly 80s music show hosted by former [[WBKV|WTSS]] evening jock John Anthony (essentially a transplant of Anthony's WTSS show "The 80s at 8" in a different time slot), former WECK program director J.R. Russ's syndicated "Movie Ticket Radio", the Polish American Program with Andy Golebiowski (a show featuring Polish music that deliberately avoids the [[polka]] heard on other Buffalo stations' Polish shows), and some scattered [[brokered programming|brokered talk]] and [[public affairs programming]].
On July 3, 2020, WJJL changed its format to [[adult standards]] ending the station's decades-long oldies format and changed its call sign on July 4, 2020, to WEBR, the former call-letters at [[WDCZ|AM 970]] and [[WNED-FM|FM 94.5]] in Buffalo. The WEBR call-letters were previously used in Buffalo from 1924 until 1993. Don Angelo, a longtime radio programmer and former part-owner of [[WBBZ-TV]], began as general manager. The format change marks the return of adult standards to the Niagara Frontier for the first time since [[WECK]] dropped the format in 2017. WJJL's oldies format remains in the form of a six-hour block on Sunday afternoons, four of those hours hosted locally by John Farley, and the other two filled by [[Wink Martindale]]'s syndicated revival of ''[[The History of Rock and Roll]]''.


WEBR's music playlist initially focused on [[traditional pop]], classic [[jazz]], occasional [[beautiful music]] instrumentals, vocal harmony groups, and selections from the [[Great American Songbook]]. The station broadened the playlist in 2021, adding more [[soft rock]], [[doo-wop]] and [[adult contemporary]] selections. Another revamp of the playlist, dubbed the "Summer Sound of the City," came with the station's first anniversary in 2021, reviving a different set of jingles from the original WEBR and placing an even greater emphasis on soft oldies, with [[California sound]] and [[yacht rock]] titles. In January 2022, WEBR brought back the Great American Songbook and traditional pop playlist on Sunday evenings, an arrangement that lasted one year.
The station added a morning show hosted by Gail Ann Huber (most recently at WECK) and Bob Stilson (formerly at WBEN). Other WEBR hosts include Tom Darro (carrying over from WJJL), Jack Horohoe (returning to his WEBR midday position for the first time since 1973),<ref>https://www.wkbw.com/news/local-news/hes-back-on-the-radio-after-a-49-year-hiatus</ref> and Barry Lillis (former WGRZ weather anchor, who returns to broadcasting in Buffalo after an over 20 year absence). Horohoe unexpectedly died a few months into his second tenure on the station,<ref>https://www.facebook.com/wbbztv/posts/3755040027863811</ref> while Lillis quietly left the station after one year, being succeeded by former [[WHTT-FM|WHTT]] jock Tony Venturoli. Al Wallack, who hosted ''Jazz in the Nighttime'' on the original WEBR, reprised the show on Sunday afternoons on the current incarnation during its first few months of operation.<ref>http://www.buffalobroadcasters.com/webr-am-returns-to-airwaves/</ref> Dave Gillen, whose credits include a run at [[WTSS]] and co-founding the [[World's Largest Disco]], serves as program director and fill-in host.<ref>https://www.buffalobroadcasters.com/webr-am-names-program-director-pair-of-departures-at-wivb-tv/</ref> Additional programming includes a weekly 80s music show hosted by former WTSS evening jock John Anthony (essentially a transplant of Anthony's WTSS show "The 80s at 8" in a different time slot), former WECK program director J.R. Russ's syndicated "Movie Ticket Radio", the Polish American Program with Andy Golebiowski (a show featuring Polish music that deliberately avoids the [[polka]] heard on other Buffalo stations' Polish shows), and some scattered [[public affairs programming]].


====Addition of FM translator====
WEBR's music playlist initially focused on [[traditional pop music]], classic [[jazz]] (returning jazz to Buffalo airwaves for the first time since [[WBFO]] dropped the format in 2012), occasional [[beautiful music]] instrumentals, vocal harmony groups, and selections from the [[Great American Songbook]]. The station broadened the playlist in 2021, adding more [[soft rock]], [[doo-wop]] and [[adult contemporary music|adult contemporary]] selections (as such, [[Radio.com]] lists the station as an adult contemporary station). Another revamp of the playlist, dubbed the "Summer Sound of the City," came with the station's first anniversary in 2021, reviving a different set of jingles from the original WEBR and placing an even greater emphasis on the adult contemporary music with [[California sound]] and [[yacht rock]], resembling the [[Middle of the road (music)|MOR]] format.
In February 2023, WEBR acquired the FM translator that had previously belonged to [[WLVL]] (which Yuhnke had acquired at the same time)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Fink |first=James |date=January 30, 2023 |title=Kenmore Broadcasting acquires Lockport's WLVL-AM |url=https://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/news/2023/01/30/wlvl-am-lockport-kenmore-broadcasting-radio.html |access-date=February 1, 2023 |website=The Business Journals}}</ref> and flipped to a more explicit classic hits presentation, while maintaining some of its MOR leanings. Venturoli was named program director later that spring; Venturoli then added Mike Jacobs as the new afternoon host, replacing Wahl.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pfeiffer |first=Rick |date=May 25, 2023 |title=Falls-based WEBR radio taps veteran jock as new program director |url=https://www.niagara-gazette.com/news/local_news/falls-based-webr-radio-taps-veteran-jock-as-new-program-director/article_2815cc42-f69b-11ed-875e-8f8519ce5eed.html |access-date=June 6, 2023 |website=Niagara Gazette |language=en}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
* {{Official website|https://webrradio.com/}}
*[https://www.facebook.com/WEBR-1440-104822477952430/ WEBR Radio 1440 AM Facebook]
{{AM station data|39517|WEBR}}
{{Official website|http://www.webrradio.com/}}
;FM translator
{{AM station data|WEBR}}
* {{FCC-LMS-Facility|151592|W287CV}}
* {{FXL|W287CV}}


{{Buffalo Radio}}
{{Buffalo Radio}}
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[[Category:1948 establishments in New York (state)]]
[[Category:1948 establishments in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Adult standards radio stations in the United States]]
[[Category:Adult standards radio stations in the United States]]
[[Category:Full service radio stations in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 07:12, 24 July 2024

WEBR
Broadcast areaBuffalo-Niagara Falls metropolitan area
Frequency1440 kHz
BrandingAM 1440–FM 105.3 WEBRRadio.com
Programming
FormatSoft Oldies
AffiliationsNBC News Radio
Ownership
Owner
  • William Yuhnke
  • (Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.)
WLVL
History
First air date
December 21, 1947; 76 years ago (1947-12-21)
Former call signs
WJJL (1947–2020)
Call sign meaning
"We Extend Buffalo's Regards"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID39517
ClassD
Power
  • 1,000 watts (day)
  • 55 watts (night)
Transmitter coordinates
43°4′43.00″N 79°0′40.00″W / 43.0786111°N 79.0111111°W / 43.0786111; -79.0111111
Translator(s)105.3 W287CV (Lockport)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Websitewebrradio.com

WEBR (1440 kHz) is an AM commercial radio station licensed to Niagara Falls, New York. It serves the Buffalo–Niagara Falls metropolitan area from studios on Kenmore Avenue in Buffalo. The station is currently owned by William Yuhnke, with the license held by Kenmore Broadcasting Communications, Inc.[2] It broadcasts a full-service soft oldies radio format, mostly from the 1970s. On weekends, it airs programs featuring Polish and Italian music, oldies and adult standards shows.

By day, WEBR transmits with 1,000 watts of power, using a non-directional antenna pattern. At night, to avoid interfering with other stations on 1440 AM, power is reduced to 55 watts. The transmitter is on Buffalo Avenue (NY State Route 384) in Niagara Falls, near South Hyde Park Boulevard.[3]

History

[edit]

As WJJL

[edit]
WJJL's logo during the ownership of M.J. Phillips (1990s to 2019).

On December 21, 1947; 76 years ago (1947-12-21), the station signed on as WJJL. The call sign represented the initials of its founding owner, John J. Laux. The station was originally a daytimer, required to go off the air at sunset.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Canadian native Thomas Talbot worked for Laux as a salesperson at the station. Eventually, Talbot became sales manager and then owner of WJJL, which was incorporated as the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corp. He also owned FM radio station 96.1 WBNY (now WTSS) in Buffalo.

Talbot began one of the first radio "two-way" telephone talk shows in the United States in the early 1950s, which was called Party Line. There was an eight-second delay to avoid potential problem calls.

The mid-morning show was named Viewpoint in the 1960s and continues to be hosted by longtime Niagara Falls fixture and former news director Tom Darro.[4]

Talbot died in 1976, and the station was taken over by his widow, Norma Talbot.

An 18-year-old aspiring country musician named Ramblin' Lou Schriver was one of the station's early on-air personalities. In 1970, he bought his own station, WXRL 1300 AM, in Lancaster, New York.[5]

In WJJL's heyday, the station was locally programmed for Niagara Falls with a full line-up of live, local personalities. An active news department covered Niagara Falls and the surrounding Niagara County.

The station aired a number of live ethnic and specialty programs on weekends. They included the Spanish language Ecos Borincanos program aimed at the Puerto Rican community, which enjoyed a 40-year run, along with the Italian Mattinata D'Oro and Pit Stop for auto-racing fans. Later, Casa Rico, the nation's longest running Italian language program, moved to WJJL, and it continues today on WEBR, renamed "Italian Gold" with Tony Occhiuto as host.

Former personalities

[edit]

WJJL was a launching pad for many future top talents. These include former News Director and Viewpoint host Dave McKinley, later an Emmy Award-winning reporter for WGRZ-TV 2 in Buffalo. John Murphy, the radio voice of Buffalo Bills football, worked there early in his career, as did long-time WJYE/WMSX Morning Host Joe Chille, and national voice-over artist (and WTWW shortwave personality) Jeff Laurence. Former WGN Radio-Chicago VP/general manager Tom Langmyer worked there as a summer fill-in personality, news reporter and anchor while in college.

Other noted WJJL alumni include George "Hound Dog" Lorenz, Barry Lillis, Dorothy Shank, WBEN Buffalo talk show host Tom Bauerle, WBFO Buffalo Reporter Dave Debo, Tony Magoo, John Jarrett, Jon Park, David J. Miller, Bob O'Neil, WKBW-TV Buffalo Anchor Melanie Pritchard, WGR Buffalo's Howard Simon, former WIVB-TV Buffalo personality Craig Nigrelli and Cumulus Media Networks, Red Eye Radio, Nationally Syndicated Talk Host and former WBEN Talk Host Gary McNamara. Local, national and satellite radio star Zig Fracassi interned there.

Changing ownership

[edit]

The Talbot family sold WJJL to M.J. Phillips, who owned the station from the 1990s until 2020 and operated it as an oldies music station. Unlike other oldies stations, WJJL maintained its focus on 1950s and early 1960s music throughout Phillips's ownership, resisting the format drift to classic hits that most other oldies stations experienced. In the 21st century, Phillips encountered financial problems (for a time he was listed as a debtor in possession of the WJJL license) and frequently tangled with a vexatious litigant named Joann who made repeated false filings with the FCC in a failed attempt to wrest control of the station from Phillips.[6]

After WJJL's Niagara Falls offices and studios were destroyed in a fire in 1999, Phillips moved the station to West Seneca, a Buffalo suburb, which is 30 miles from Niagara Falls.

In 2009, WJJL's morning show began broadcasting from a satellite studio in the Niagara Arts and Cultural Center in Niagara Falls.[7] WJJL also carried a daily talk show by former mayor Vince Anello, following Anello's 2011 release from prison for corruption, which continued after the format flip to WEBR until Anello's 2021 death.[8]

From 2000 to 2009, WJJL broadcast weekly games of the City of Buffalo Public School's Harvard Cup football league. The Harvard Cup championship was traditionally played on Thanksgiving. WJJL continued its weekly coverage of Western New York High School Football with a "Game of the Week," focusing on the teams of the former Harvard Cup League. The games featured Rich Kozak as play by play man with Hall of Fame Coach Art Serotte as color analyst. Roger Weiss served as guest analyst and half-time host and "Dr." John Pluta was the sideline reporter. The broadcasts also featured Sean Bruso and Chuck Dockery. The broadcasts helped to foster the Harvard Cup Hall of Fame and HarvardCup.com as the first dedicated website devoted exclusively to high school coverage on the Western New York area.[9]

As WEBR

[edit]

Adult standards and MOR period

[edit]
WEBR's studio building on Kenmore Avenue in Buffalo, which it has occupied since 2020.

In 2020, Phillips sold the station to William Yuhnke, who re-launched the station's online presence and began streaming the station on the Internet.[10] Yuhnke owns Liberty Yellow Cab, a taxicab service in the Buffalo area.[11] One of Phillips's minority partners, Jeffrey Lazroe, sued the station shortly after the sale.[12] The station also faces issues with its transmitter, which sits on the property of Superior Lubricants in Niagara Falls, a property that is set to be repurposed; Yuhnke is hoping to find a new site in Niagara Falls but is also talking with interests in North Tonawanda.[13]

On July 3, 2020, WJJL changed its format to adult standards ending the station's decades-long oldies format. It changed its call sign on July 4, 2020, to WEBR, the former call-letters at AM 1340, AM 970 and FM 94.5 in Buffalo. The WEBR call letters were previously used in Buffalo from 1924 until 1993. Don Angelo, a longtime radio programmer and former part-owner of WBBZ-TV, began as general manager. The format change marked the return of adult standards to the Niagara Frontier for the first time since WECK dropped the format in 2017. Oldies occupy a six-hour block on Sunday afternoons, four of those hours hosted locally by John Farley, and the other two filled by Wink Martindale's syndicated revival of The History of Rock and Roll.

The station added a morning show hosted by Gail Ann Huber (a Buffalo radio veteran with experience at WECK, WHTT, and WYRK) and Bob Stilson (formerly at WBEN and WKBW-TV). Other WEBR hosts at the time of launch included Tom Darro (carrying over his talk show from WJJL), original 1970s-era WEBR jockey Jack Horohoe with the "Midday Coffee,"[14] and Barry Lillis with the "Make Believe Dance Floor." (Lillis, a WJJL alumnus most famous for his work as WGRZ's weather anchor, returned to broadcasting after over 20 years out of the field). Horohoe unexpectedly died a few months into his second tenure on the station,[15] while Lillis left the station after one year. (He stated that the format tweak that year, while he was "OK" with the music change, had also led to him losing creative control over his show; he was unwilling to voice-track a show in which he had incorporated audience interaction and theater of the mind.)[16] Lillis would return in a weekend position in late 2022. WHTT jock Tony Venturoli joined the station shortly after Lillis's departure, hosting a classic hits themed block. Al Wallack, who hosted Jazz in the Nighttime on the original WEBR, reprised the show on Sunday afternoons on the current incarnation during its first few months of operation.[17] Huber left the station near the end of 2022, with Kelly Wahl taking over afternoon drive. Dave Gillen, whose credits include time at 102.5 (now WBKV) and co-founding the World's Largest Disco, served as program director and fill-in host.[18] Gillen departed the station amid controversy and a lawsuit by former operations manager Nancy Freeman, who accused Gillen of sexual harassment and WEBR of retaliating against her.[19] Additional programming included a weekly 80s music show hosted by former WTSS evening jock John Anthony (essentially a transplant of Anthony's WTSS show "The 80s at 8" in a different time slot), former WECK program director J.R. Russ's syndicated "Movie Ticket Radio", the Polish American Program with Andy Golebiowski (a show featuring Polish music that deliberately avoids the polka heard on other Buffalo stations' Polish shows), and some scattered brokered talk and public affairs programming.

WEBR's music playlist initially focused on traditional pop, classic jazz, occasional beautiful music instrumentals, vocal harmony groups, and selections from the Great American Songbook. The station broadened the playlist in 2021, adding more soft rock, doo-wop and adult contemporary selections. Another revamp of the playlist, dubbed the "Summer Sound of the City," came with the station's first anniversary in 2021, reviving a different set of jingles from the original WEBR and placing an even greater emphasis on soft oldies, with California sound and yacht rock titles. In January 2022, WEBR brought back the Great American Songbook and traditional pop playlist on Sunday evenings, an arrangement that lasted one year.

Addition of FM translator

[edit]

In February 2023, WEBR acquired the FM translator that had previously belonged to WLVL (which Yuhnke had acquired at the same time)[20] and flipped to a more explicit classic hits presentation, while maintaining some of its MOR leanings. Venturoli was named program director later that spring; Venturoli then added Mike Jacobs as the new afternoon host, replacing Wahl.[21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WEBR". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "WEBR Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. ^ Radio-Locator.com/WEBR
  4. ^ Continelli, Louise (May 24, 2009). "Talk show host likes to listen to callers". Buffalo News.
  5. ^ Kunz Goldman, Mary (January 19, 2016). "Ramblin' Lou Schriver, soul of country music in WNY, has died". Buffalo News. Archived from the original on January 26, 2016.
  6. ^ NorthEast Radio Watch: July 7, 2007 "There's no possible way that "Joann Nicola Lutz Distefano Phillips" is getting the license of WJJL (1440 Niagara Falls), either. It's been a couple of years since someone using that name and claiming to be the ex-wife of the station's owner began posting on message boards (harmlessly) and filing renewal applications with the FCC (not so harmlessly), and it's taken that long for the Commission to figure out what most of us have known for a while: the only legitimate renewal application that was filed for WJJL was the one filed in February 2006 by the real licensee, M.J. Phillips. Next question: will Phillips, or the FCC, take any action against the "Joann" applicant for the fraudulent application, which certainly must have cost some legal time, if nothing else, for Phillips."
  7. ^ "Summit Mall Merchants Find New Homes". Archived from the original on July 8, 2011.
  8. ^ "Former Mayor Vince Anello remembered | Local News | niagara-gazette.com".
  9. ^ City broadcasts, sadly, will be silenced. The Buffalo News. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  10. ^ "Station Sales Week Of 3/13: USA Radio Network Head Adds Philly Translator – RadioInsight".
  11. ^ "Cab company says customers, drivers who switched to ride-hailing are coming back | WBFO".
  12. ^ Connelly, Patrick (September 1, 2020). [lawsuit-radio-station-part-owner-lazroe-not-told.html Rebranded Buffalo radio station WEBR-AM faces lawsuit from former part-owner] Buffalo Business First. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
  13. ^ Genco, Joseph (March 1, 2021). WEBR may signal move in Falls. Niagara Gazette. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
  14. ^ "He's back on the radio after a 49-year hiatus".
  15. ^ "WBBZ TV | Buffalo's Buzz on Facebook". Archived from the original on April 30, 2022 – via Facebook.[user-generated source]
  16. ^ Critic, News TV. "Barry Lillis explains exit from WEBR; local woman in danger on 'Big Brother'". The Buffalo News. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  17. ^ "WEBR-AM Returns to Airwaves - Buffalo Broadcasters Association".
  18. ^ "WEBR-AM Names Program Director, Pair of Departures at WIVB-TV - Buffalo Broadcasters Association".
  19. ^ "Buffalo's WEBR Hit With $1 Million Suit By Former Operations Manager". Insideradio.com. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  20. ^ Fink, James (January 30, 2023). "Kenmore Broadcasting acquires Lockport's WLVL-AM". The Business Journals. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
  21. ^ Pfeiffer, Rick (May 25, 2023). "Falls-based WEBR radio taps veteran jock as new program director". Niagara Gazette. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
[edit]
FM translator