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WLNG

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ERP
  
5,300 watts

Class
  
A

Frequency
  
92.1 MHz

Format
  
Oldies

Slogan
  
The Oldies Station

HAAT
  
106 meters (348 ft)

Facility ID
  
39640

City of license
  
Sag Harbor

Area
  
Long Island, The Hamptons

WLNG wwwwlngcomimageslogopng

Broadcast area
  
The HamptonsEastern Long Island

First air date
  
August 13, 1963 (1963-08-13)

Owner
  
Gary Sapine, Rebecca Johnson, Raymond A_ Nelson, Trustees

Branding
  
WLNG 92.1 FM, Radio Eastern Long Island

Wlng radio


WLNG (92.1 FM) is an oldies formatted, full-service broadcast radio station licensed to Sag Harbor, New York, serving The Hamptons and Eastern Long Island. WLNG is owned and operated by Gary Sapiane, Rebecca Johnson, and Raymond A. Nelson, Trustees.

Contents

Wlng 92 1 fm radio paul sidney memories new york 1985


Programming and history

WLNG started on AM at 1600 kHz. In 1996 the 1600 frequency was sold to WWRL so that they could increase the power of their station which was on the same frequency closer to New York City. WLNG has been broadcasting on FM since 1969. Its FM transmitter is located on a hill in Noyack, New York which disc jockeys call "Mount Sidney" after longtime station president Paul Sidney (1940–2009). The station's call letters come from Long Island. It transmitted in monaural until January 20, 2011, a rarity on the FM band which is mostly stereo.

WLNG has earned a reputation as a throwback to an earlier era with its frequent use of jingles, reverb, frequent remote broadcasts at local events, and personality disc jockeys. In 1998, on the occasion of the station's 35th anniversary on the air, and president Paul Sidney's 34th year there, he stated "The key to staying around for 35 years is pretty simple: Be local, in news, sound and music."

The station's target market is the Hamptons and Eastern Long Island, though the station has been noted as being heard "from Mastic to Montauk; the signal even reaches parts of Rhode Island and Connecticut." According to Sidney and local business people, the station built good relationships with local establishments, and as of 2004 was producing 250 remote broadcasts per year from community locales, events and businesses.

The station is noted for its use of numerous jingles (many from the original PAMS jingle library), which are often aired back-to-back. Paul Sidney, who was with the station since the year following its start in 1963, started the jingle practice. As the use of jingles declined in the 1970s, Sidney "became obsessed with them" and collected over 2,000. As he put it in a New Yorker magazine "Talk of the Town" article in 2002, "We're the only station that when we say 'Here comes fourteen in a row' we're not talking about records."

WLNG was one of the first radio stations in the country to focus on playing oldies, and identified itself as "The Oldies Station" beginning in the early 1960s despite a consultant's warning. While the station included current hits in rotation for decades and even as recently as 1999, today its playlist is almost all oldies.

As of 1988, WLNG competed with 22 other stations in its market. In 2005 Edison Research wrote about WLNG's standing in the area:

"...one of the oddest success stories of recent months: WLNG Eastern Long Island, N.Y., whose broad playlist, retro jingles, and endless remotes have made it a radio junkie’s favorite for years. Then the market got its first ratings, and suddenly WLNG was No. 3 12-plus - an individually owned station hanging in when the groups were pulling out, or at least getting nervous."

In 1995, the station began leasing transmission tower space to Connecticut-based classical and NPR-affiliate WSHU-FM, during a period of increasing competition for listeners in specific demographics. At the time, the station was described by a competitor (WEHM), as probably generating "the most sales in the region", and Sidney stated that "banks regarded WLNG as the most successful station on the East End."

On May 29, 2015 longtime WLNG air personality Rusty Potz ends his run on the "Potz On The Program" that aired weekdays from 3pm to 5pm with the "TV Trivia Quiz" contest each hour. "Mr. Potz, who has been in radio for 52 years, will retire to Sarasota, Florida, with his wife, Margaret, although he will continue to work part-time selling advertising for the station."

On-Air staff

  • Gary Sapiane
  • Chris Buckhout
  • Brian "The Cannon" Bannon
  • Chuck Mackin
  • Al Case
  • Bill Thomas
  • Ed Wright
  • Al Patterson
  • Scotty Hart
  • Dan Duprey
  • Programs and syndicated shows

  • Sock Hop Saturday Night w/ Mark Edwards
  • American Standards By The Sea w/ Dick Robinson
  • American Hit List w/ M.G. Kelly
  • Greatest Hits USA w/ Chuck Taylor
  • Beatles Show w/ Casey Piotrowski
  • Doo Wop Stop w/ Cool Bobby B
  • That Thing w/ Rich Appel
  • News and sports

    WLNG's local news coverage, according to the station's vice president in 2007, is considered the best by many locals and is famous for being the definitive source "with close to a 90% share" for weather information during major storms. On July 17, 1996, the station was broadcasting a live remote from Jamesport, New York when TWA Flight 800 crashed into the nearby Atlantic Ocean, and states that it was the first to break news of the event.

    In 2007, the station became affiliated with ESPN 1050, for local broadcast of ESPN sports radio, but was not without some coverage difficulties, according to Newsday. The station was affiliated with NBC Radio between 2012 and 2015 and is affiliated with Westwood One News since 2015 for national and worldwide news.

    Before the 2011 Hurricane Irene, WLNG was listed as the "reliable resource for the latest on the hurricane's progess." by Rep. Timothy Bishop, (D. NY), and was the designated broadcast information source.

    During Hurricane Sandy in 2012 WLNG continued broadcasting and streaming online on generator power, using flashlights, as the storm surge rose to "ankle deep" in the studio. When a "burning" smell was detected, the station finally went off air "from 8 p.m. on Monday night until 3 a.m Tuesday morning" when the water subsided. After the storm, WLNG helped coordinate relief supplies and vehicles with local police.

    Specials

    The station has allowed guest hosts on air, if their airtime was sponsored. In 1987, a pair of (sponsored) 5th grade students broadcast for three hours, during which "all did not go well", catching the attention of New York Times "Long Island Journal Desk" columnist Diane Ketchum.

    Recognition

  • In 1993, WLNG won a National Association of Broadcasters Crystal Radio Award "for excellence in community service."
  • In 2007, Paul Sidney was inducted into the New York State Broadcasters Association Hall of Fame.
  • On the March 20, 2014 and January 6, 2016 episodes of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Billy Joel and Jimmy Fallon discuss a plot they have to "crash" the WLNG studio in Sag Harbor. They claim the plan was devised during a party at Howard Stern's house of which they both attended
  • References

    WLNG Wikipedia


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