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WGY-FM (103.1 MHz) is a news/talk station licensed to Albany, New York. The station broadcasts 24 hours a day at 5,600 watts ERP from a non-directional antenna in North Greenbush, New York located near U.S. Route 4 .
WGY (810 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Schenectady, New York, carrying a news/talk format which is simulcast full-time over WGY-FM (103.1 FM). Owned by iHeartMedia , the station serves Albany , Troy and the Capital District of New York, and is a clear-channel station with extended nighttime range.
WRVE, an FM radio station on 99.5 MHz licensed to Schenectady, New York, United States, which held the callsign WGY-FM from 1988 to 1994. Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about radio and/or television stations with the same/similar call signs or branding.
The FM dial is primarily made up of commercial music-formatted stations similar to those in other cities around North America, the largest of which include Pop music station WFLY 'FLY-92', Adult Contemporary WYJB 'B-95.5', Hot AC WRVE '99.5 The River', Rock station WQBK-FM 'Q-103', Classic Rock WPYX 'PYX-106', and Country music WGNA-FM 'Country ...
In March 2018, WGDJ added The Mark Levin Show to its lineup after the show was dropped by WGY. [14] In 2021, it began airing The Dan Bongino Show after rival station WGY began airing The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. [15] Both shows occupy the same time slot formerly given to The Rush Limbaugh Show after Limbaugh's death. [16] [17]
He was the longtime host of the WGY Morning News on news-talk radio station 810 WGY in Schenectady, New York. [1] Prior to working for WGY, Weeks was a weather forecaster for WAST-TV (now NBC network affiliate WNYT in Albany) and a DJ for Top 40 station WTRY, now sports station WOFX. [2]
Once using the promotional tagline "The most fired man in Rochester media," [6] Lonsberry hosts three radio talk shows. Two featuring a mix of news, political commentary, callers, and day-to-day anecdotes that air on WHAM in Rochester, New York, from 8 AM to 12 PM ET and on WSYR AM/FM in Syracuse, New York, from 3 PM to 6 PM, [7] and one that he co-hosts from 12 PM to 2 PM on WAIO Rochester ...
While operating as W2XOY, W85A and WGFM the station sometimes duplicated the programming of WGY, however, considerable effort was made to create programming unique to the FM channel. On June 15, 1946, WGFM complied with the FCC's postwar FM band reallocation and switched on a transmitter at 100.7 MHz in the new band; for two years, it operated ...