Girish Mahajan (Editor)

WFIR

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Broadcast area
  
Roanoke Valley

Class
  
B

Transmitter coordinates
  
(day) (night)

City of license
  
Roanoke

Area
  
Roanoke Valley

First air date
  
June 20, 1924

Facility ID
  
31138

Frequency
  
960 kHz

Owner
  
Mel Wheeler, Inc.

Branding
  
News/Talk WFIR

WFIR httpslh4googleusercontentcompXpzd6zyQHQAAA

Power
  
10,000 watts daytime 5000 watts nightime

Format
  
Talk radio, All-news radio

Slogan
  
Roanoke Valley's Local News and Weather Station

WFIR (960 kHz "WFIR 960 AM - 107.3 FM") is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Roanoke, Virginia and serving the Roanoke Valley. It is owned and operated by Mel Wheeler, Inc. and airs a News/Talk radio format. WFIR broadcasts at 10,000 watts non-directional by day. But at night, to avoid interfering with other stations on AM 960, it reduces power to 5000 watts and uses a directional antenna. WFIR's studios and offices are on Electric Road in Roanoke. The AM transmitter is off Brandon Avenue SW. The transmitter for FM translator W297BC 107.3 is off Catawba Valley Drive.

Contents

Local news and talk programs air in weekday morning and afternoon drive times, with syndicated shows heard the rest of day, including Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Dave Ramsey, Mark Levin, Clyde Lewis and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory. Weekends feature shows on money, religion, law, computers, guns, home repair and gardening. Syndicated weekend hosts include Kim Komando, Leo Laporte and Bill Handel. World and national news from ABC News Radio is heard at the beginning of most hours.

Translator

In addition to the main station, WFIR is relayed by an FM translator to widen its broadcast area.

History

On its website, WFIR says it was the second radio station to sign-on in Virginia. Frank E. Maddox first began experimenting with amateur radio broadcasts in Roanoke as 3BIY in the early 1920s. His employer, the Richardson-Wayland Electrical Company, asked him to take his knowledge and put a commercial radio station on the air in 1924. The company sold radios but people in the Roanoke area had no local stations to listen to. Their radios could only pick up distant signals after sunset. On June 20, 1924, WDBJ officially went on the air. The studios were in the back of the company's store. The new station broadcast at 1310 kHzs, with 20 watts of power. The first program was a live banjo player.

In 1926, the station moved to new studios at The American Theater on Jefferson Street and Campbell Avenue in Roanoke. In 1929, WDBJ began broadcasting at 930 kHz at 500 watts power, becoming a network affiliate of CBS Radio. (WDBJ/WFIR was a CBS affiliate for more than 70 years.) The station was sold to The Roanoke Times newspaper in 1931. Power increased to 1000 watts in 1934. In 1939, Chief Engineer J.W. Robertson increased the power to 5000 watts. In 1941, under the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement or NARBA, the station moved to its current dial position at AM 960. During the 1940s, 50s and 60s, WDBJ mixed bluegrass music and country music with adult standards and middle of the road popular tunes, while also carrying CBS Network dramas, comedies and sports. In October of 1955, WDBJ-TV signed on the air. Since the radio station was long associated with CBS Radio, Channel 7 became a CBS Television affiliate.

In 1969, the newspaper sold its radio and TV stations to separate owners. The TV station kept the WDBJ call letters while AM 960 became WFIR, standing for First in Roanoke, a reminder that it was the first broadcasting operation in the Roanoke Valley. In 1979, the station was purchased by Jim Gibbons, who was the play-by-play announcer for the Washington Redskins football team. Gibbons added more news and sports into the program schedule. In 1979, WFIR began carrying the syndicated Larry King Show overnight, and later, family financial adviser Bruce Williams in the evening. Through the 1980s, WFIR aired a full service adult contemporary format, keeping WFIR among the top ten radio stations in the Roanoke-Lynchburg media market ratings, despite the shift to FM radio listening. In 1989, the station added Rush Limbaugh to its midday schedule, one of his first affiliates.

In 1999, WFIR became a full time News/Talk radio station. The following year, it was bought by Mel Wheeler, Inc., which owns eight radio stations in the Roanoke-Lynchburg market. In 2001, WFIR switched from CBS Radio News to ABC News Radio hourly newscasts.

References

WFIR Wikipedia