| |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Central New York |
| Frequency | 570kHz |
| Branding | Newsradio 570 WSYR |
| Programming | |
| Format | News/talk |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WBBS,WHEN,WSYR-FM,WWHT,WYYY | |
| History | |
First air date | September 15, 1922; 103 years ago (1922-09-15) |
Former call signs |
|
Former frequencies |
|
Call sign meaning | Syracuse |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 48720 |
| Class | B |
| Power | 5,000watts |
Transmitter coordinates | 42°59′13.24″N76°9′7.73″W / 42.9870111°N 76.1521472°W /42.9870111; -76.1521472 |
| Repeater | 106.9WSYR-FM (Solvay) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen live (viaiHeartRadio) |
| Website | wsyr |
WSYR (570kHz) is a commercialAMradio station inSyracuse, New York, and servingCentral New York. Owned and operated byiHeartMedia, it broadcasts anews/talkformat, calling itself "Newsradio 570 WSYR". The station hassimulcast onWSYR-FM (106.9MHz) inSolvay since January 2011. The studios and offices are on Plum Street in Syracuse.
WSYR transmits with 5,000watts, using adirectional antenna with a three-tower array. Thetransmitter is off Valley Drive at Dorwin Avenue nearOnondaga Creek.[2]

Weekday mornings begin with a local news and interview show with Dave Allen. Afternoons are hosted byBob Lonsberry, who broadcasts his show from the studios ofsister stationWHAM inRochester.[3] The rest of the weekday schedule comes fromnationally syndicated talk shows, mostly fromiHeartMediasubsidiary,Premiere Networks:The Sean Hannity Show,The Glenn Beck Program,The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, andCoast to Coast AM withGeorge Noory.[4] One program fromWestwood One is heard weeknights,The Mark Levin Show.
The weekend schedule includes shows on money, cars, home repair and pets, some of which are paidbrokered programming. Syndicated shows heard on weekends includeThe Tech GuyLeo Laporte,At Home withGary Sullivan,Handel on The Law withBill Handel,The Weekend with Michael Brown,The Cat's Roundtable with John Catsimatidis andSunday Night Live withBill Cunningham. A Sunday morning WSYR talk show with George Kilpatrick ran from 1994 to 2014. Kilpatrick later joined 620WHEN, anurban adult contemporary station.[5] Another long-running weekend show,The Weeder's Digest with Terry Ettinger, was canceled the same weekend Kilpatrick left WSYR.[6] Most hours begin with world and national news fromFox News Radio.
WSYR was first licensed in 1926. However, it has traditionally traced its founding to September 15, 1922, the date when station WMAC, which merged with WSYR in 1930,signed on the air.[7]
WMAC was first licensed in September 1922 to "J. Edward Page '(Clive B. Meredith)'", broadcasting on 360 meters (833 kHz) from Fernwood Street in Cazenovia, New York.[8] Thecall letters were randomly assigned from an alphabetic list of available call signs.
The next year the station was reassigned to 1150 kHz,[9] and ownership changed to just Clive B. Meredith.[10] The station moved to 1090 kHz in late 1924,[11] and to 1330 kHz in 1927.[12]
WSYR's initial telegraphed authorization was sent to Clive B. Meredith on November 20, 1926, for a station located at the Hotel Syracuse in Syracuse.[13] The station was originally on 850 kHz and shifted to 1330 kHz on June 1, 1927. Beginning in November the station received a year-long series of monthly authorizations to operate on 1020 kHz.
During this time WSYR worked with theFederal Radio Commission (FRC) on a national synchronization experiment aimed at reducing co-channel interference through the use of equipment that provided more precisely controlled transmitter frequencies.[14] For this work WSYR partnered with four other stations broadcasting on 1020 kHz (294 meters):WTMJ in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,KPRC in Houston, Texas,WODA in Paterson, New Jersey, andWGL in New York City.[15][16]
With the November 1928 implementation of the FRC'sGeneral Order 40, both WMAC and WSYR were assigned to 570 kHz on a timesharing basis, although WMAC was still licensed to Cazenovia.[17] However, on October 31, 1930 the stations were formally consolidated as a single station located in Syracuse, with the call sign WSYR-WMAC.[18] In 1931, the station transmitter was moved to the campus ofSyracuse University. The WSYR call sign was used for normal programming, switching to WMAC for programs originating from Syracuse University.[19] In late 1933 the call sign was changed to WSYR-WSYU, with the WSYU call letters now being used for Syracuse University programs instead of WMAC.[20] In mid-1940 the secondary WSYU call letters were dropped, with the station becoming just WSYR.
For decades, beginning in 1948, WSYR was owned by theNewhouse chain[21] alongside theSyracuse Post-Standard andSyracuse Herald-Journal.
For most of its early history, WSYR was anaffiliate of theNBC Red Network. It carried NBC's schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports,game shows,soap operas andbig band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio".[22]
In 1946, the owners added anFM station (now 94.5WYYY) and in 1950, a television station (nowWSTM-TV).[23] Because WSYR was an NBC affiliate, WSYR-TV also carried NBC shows.
As network programming moved to television in the 1950s and 1960s, WSYR switched to afull service,middle of the road format of popular adult music, news, sports and talk. In the 1980s, the talk programming increased, and music shows were reduced. By 1990, WSYR was an all-talk radio station.
WSYR and WYYY were acquired by Clear Channel Communications (now known asiHeartMedia) in the 1990s. For a brief time, it had another televisionsister station when Clear Channel acquired WIXT (channel 9) and brought back theWSYR-TV call letters after a 26-year absence. The new WSYR-TV was sold off along with the rest of Clear Channel's television division in 2007.
In late 2010, numerous indications based uponFCC filings, domain registrations, and a format change at a sister station, suggested that WSYR was preparing to launch an FMsimulcast on 106.9 MHz. The simulcast became official at 7 p.m. on January 2, 2011, as co-ownedWPHR became "Newsradio 106.9 WSYR".
For a time, the FM side gained priority in on-airadvertising and on the Web site banner.[24] However, the AM side remained the primary station, and over the next two years most references to the FM side were cut back, to the extent that the station now refers to itself as "Newsradio 570 WSYR, now on 106.9 FM".
For decades, WSYR was theflagship station of theSyracuse Orange football andmen's basketball teams. Those games are now heard onclassic rock stationsWTKW and WTKV, both on FM.