| Semi-satellite ofWABC, New York City | |
|---|---|
| |
| Broadcast area | Eastern Long Island |
| Frequency | 107.1MHz |
| Branding | Talkradio 107.1 |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Format | Conservative talk radio |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WABC | |
| History | |
First air date | November 14, 1980 (1980-11-14) |
Former call signs |
|
Call sign meaning | Carried over from the formerWLIR (92.7 FM), nowWFME-FM |
| Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 61089 |
| Class | A |
| ERP | 4,100 watts |
| HAAT | 121 meters (397 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°53′07.8″N72°41′33.0″W / 40.885500°N 72.692500°W /40.885500; -72.692500 (WLIR-FM) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | wabcradio |
WLIR-FM (107.1FM,Talkradio 107.1) is a radio station licensed toHampton Bays, New York, and servingeastern Long Island. The station's studios and offices are located on Third Avenue inMidtown Manhattan,[3] with additional offices on Long Island inBay Shore,[4] and transmitting facilities located inNorthampton in Suffolk County. The station is owned by businessmanJohn Catsimatidis through his Red Apple Media company.
The station went on the air on November 14, 1980, as WWHB under the moniker "The New 107 FM WWHB", with anadult contemporary music format.[5] In 1984, Eddie Simon along with his brother, singerPaul Simon, purchased the station.[6][7] Its format then shifted to aTop 40/CHR format as "Laser Hot HB107". On September 1, 1990, WWHB began simulcastingAOR stationWNEW-FM from New York City.
On December 7, 1996, the station became part of the Big City Radiotrimulcast (and eventual quadcast) with other 107.1 stations inBriarcliff Manor, New York and northern New Jersey and later, theLehigh Valley/Allentown, Pennsylvania area. WWHB and the other two multicast stations switched formats tocountry as "Y-107". The call sign was changed to WWVY on May 16, 1997, then to WWXY on March 22, 1999 (after 107.1 FM inBriarcliff Manor, New York changed from WWXY to WYNY).[8] On May 9, 2002, after a day ofstunting with construction noises, the quadcast adopted aTropical music format branded "Rumba 107".[9] The format was ill-suited to the quadcast suburban signals, and at the end of the year, Big City Radio filed for bankruptcy and sold the quadcast toNassau Broadcasting, who broke up the quadcast and sold the individual stations.
Jarad Broadcasting picked up WWXY in April 2003.[10] 107.1 FM initially simulcasted WLIR (92.7 FM) fromGarden City, New York, but in January 2004, 92.7 FM was purchased by Univision and flipped to Spanish language "Latino Mix"WZAA, simulcastingWCAA.[11] 107.1 FM then became a fully transplanted WLIR, taking on amodern rock format and the WLIR-FM call sign, turning into "THE BOX".[11] This format lasted until September 2005, when asmooth jazz/chill music format called "NeoBreeze" was adopted. This format was a failure, and the modern rock format returned in December 2005. In January 2008, the music ended and WLIR began simulcastingWEPN (ESPN Radio, 1050 AM) in alocal marketing agreement.[12] WLIR was sold to Livingstone in 2011[13] and flipped to a Christian format branded as "Hope Radio".
On August 5, 2013, Livingstone Broadcasting shifted the "Hope Radio" Christian format toWBLI-HD2 along with translators 94.9 W235BB Hauppauge, New York; 96.5 W243BF Shirley, New York; 101.5 W268AN Plainview, New York and 104.5 W283BA Selden, New York. WLIR-FM dropped the Christian format and became "Champions Radio" touted as "Long Island's First & Only Sports Radio Station". WLIR-FM was broadcast on 107.1 and 96.9 W245BA in Suffolk County, New York. The format was short lived.[14]
On February 24, 2014, WLIR-FM dropped all sports programming and reverted to Christian formatted "Hope Radio".[15]
On August 1, 2014, Pillar of Fire began a lease of WLIR-FM.WAWZ-FM, Zarephath, New Jersey (STAR 99.1) was broadcast on WLIR-FM as well as its translators as "STAR 107.1". The lease ended in April 2015 and WLIR-FM reverted to Christian formatted "Hope Radio".
On July 1, 2017, the station was sold to VMT Media Inc. and continued to air the "Hope Radio" format.

On January 1, 2018, the station dropped "Hope Radio" and began broadcasting an unbranded mix of oldies and classic rock music as a transitional format, simulcasting on 96.9 W245BA.[16] On April 20, 2018, the station officially re-launched asclassic hits "Real-FM".[17]
On July 1, 2020, Red Apple Media – owner ofWABC in New York City – began operating the station through a local marketing agreement, and converted it to a near-simulcast of WABC's talk programming. An exception to the simulcast was a local morning program hosted byFrank Morano, which replacedBrian Kilmeade (as it was already cleared by competitorWRCN-FM).[18][19] A week later, Red Apple Media announced its intent to acquire the station outright,[20]and that Morano would also join WABC's main lineup on weekday overnights and Sunday nights.[21][22]