Everything about Wbz Am totally explained
WBZ is the
callsign for an
AM radio station in
Boston, Massachusetts which is owned by
CBS Radio (formerly Infinity Broadcasting), which itself is owned by the
CBS Corporation. Originally based in
Springfield, Massachusetts, WBZ swapped callsigns with sister station WBZA (then located in Boston) in
1931, a move that placed the station at its current location.
WBZ radio, which broadcasts at 1030
kHz, is the oldest surviving commercial radio station in
New England, as it began broadcasting in
1921 (Pioneering station WGI in nearby Medford Hillsides was transmitting regular programming as early as 1919 as experimental station 1XE, but went out of business in 1925). WBZ currently runs an
all-news format during the day and a
talk radio format at night, with hosts like
Dan Rea,
Steve LeVeille, and
Jordan Rich. The station is the most listened-to radio station in the Boston area, and covers much of the eastern
United States at night with its 50,000-
watt signal from their
transmitter location in
Hull, Massachusetts, which has been used by the station since
1940.
During the daytime hours, WBZ is also well-known for "Traffic on the 3s", which provides a summary of traffic conditions in the area. In addition, national and international news, as well as some segments, are provided by the
ABC Information network and the
CBS Radio Network (until December 2005, this included noted radio raconteur
Paul Harvey, which was provided by ABC), but almost all programming, including the nighttime talk shows, is produced in-house. WBZ has also been heavily involved in charitable work, with its annual Christmastime fund drive for Boston's Children's Hospital (which it does along with sister TV station
WBZ-TV) being the most high-profile.
For the past 15 years, it was the home of talkmaster
David Brudnoy until the day before his death in
2004. Other notable personalities included talk show host Bob Kennedy, poet/personality Dick Summer, famed disc jockeys Bruce Bradley, Jeff Kaye, Ron Landry and later, Larry Justice,
jazz DJ turned talkmaster
Norm Nathan, late-night talker and humorist
Larry Glick, and morning personalities
Tom Bergeron and
Dave Maynard.
During the
1940s, WBZ operated a shortwave station using the callsign
WBOS; this station has been dark since 1953 and the callsign has since been reassigned to what is now an
AAA station. Group W made half-hearted attempts to launch FM service, at various points operating FM service on 100.7 (now WZLX, ironically a current sister to WBZ-AM) and 106.7 (now
WMJX owned by Greater Media), before selling each to other chains. Additionally, during the 1970s, WBZ was one of a number of
clear channel AM stations that petitioned to be allowed to increase their power; WBZ would have used half a megawatt out of
Provincetown, Massachusetts to reach all of New England during the day. A backlash from smaller stations led to the petition being denied and station protections limited to a 750 miles radius, as well as the cancellation of the entire clear channel service.
History
WBZ 1030 Boston is the oldest surviving broadcaster in
New England, and was the first licensed "commercial" radio station in the United States. It was first licensed for operation in Springfield by
Westinghouse in September of
1921. A second station, WBZA, was built in
Boston, Massachusetts in 1924. In 1931, the stations swapped call letters and the main studio and operations were relocated to Boston as WBZ, with the WBZA call letters used for Springfield, both stations simulcasting on the same frequency. WBZA, Springfield was deleted in 1962. The original format was general entertainment and information which included
dramas,
sports,
news,
talk shows, special events, some music, and public affairs programming.
In 1926 WBZ became one of the first affiliates of the first network, NBC, becoming Boston's home of the NBC
Blue Network. In the early 1930s, a call-letter swap sent WBZ to Boston and WBZA to
Springfield. In
1931, WBZ built a transmitter complex in
Millis, Massachusetts which allowed the station to boost power to 50,000 watts. But WBZ didn't stay in Millis for long; the station moved its transmitter site to
Hull, Massachusetts in
1940 a move which allowed Westinghouse to launch a shortwave station and have the transmitters and antennas for both at the same site. WBZ moved to its present dial location, 1030 kilocycles (kilohertz) on March 29, 1941. WBZ continued to be an
NBC Radio affiliate, although when the
Justice Department ordered NBC to divest of one its two radio networks, NBC kept the "Red", which simply became NBC Radio. WBZ switched affiliations from the "Blue" to the "Red" to remain with NBC. Like other major-market network-affiliated radio stations of the time, WBZ also broadcast a few hours of local programming, including
Vaudeville-like musical performances from Max Zides, Tom Currier, and others, during those hours when NBC wasn't feeding programs to affiliates. On June 9, 1948, WBZ-TV Channel 4 signed on and took NBC Television affiliation (switching to CBS on January 2, 1995). Later that month, WBZ Radio moved its studios from the Hotel Bradford in downtown Boston to join WBZ-TV in a newly-completed building at 1170 Soldiers Field Road in the
Allston section of Boston. In
1951 Don Kent (meteorologist) started as a
meteorologist at the station, for a tenure that would endure for over three decades.
In
1952, WBZ radio expanded its broadcasting schedule to 24-hour-a-day programming. By then, entertainment shows were moving to television and WBZ radio began to play more music. WBZ Radio itself dropped its NBC affiliation in
1956 after three decades, deciding to program popular music around-the-clock. The best known personality in WBZ Radio's history,
Dave Maynard, joined the station in 1958. Another beloved WBZ Radio host was
Carl De Suze, whose career at WBZ began in the
1940s and continued into the early
1980s. De Suze was the station's morning man for over three decades. Another popular WBZ voice was longtime news anchor
Gary LaPierre, who began at the station in
1964. LaPierre, who anchored WBZ's morning newscasts for over 35 years, retired from WBZ at the end of
2006. Governor
Mitt Romney declared the day of his final broadcast, December 29, 2006, "Gary LaPierre" day. Romney, Senator
Ted Kennedy, Mayor
Tom Menino, former Mayor
Ray Flynn, former Governor
Michael Dukakis, and other notables called in during his final broadcast.
By
1960 WBZ offered a full service music format leaning toward MOR music but also featuring an increasing amount of rock and roll. Within a few years, WBZ was a
top 40 rock and roll station, and with its combination of hit music, popular personalities, powerful signal, and top-notch news coverage, WBZ was "the" radio station in the market. However, due to increased competition in the Top-40 format - first from rival WMEX (who had a head start, switching to a Top 40/rock and roll format in 1957) then from WRKO - WBZ adopted a more full-service adult approach.
WBZ wasn't Group W/Westinghouse's only Top-40 music station; for a while,
WINS New York and
KFWB Los Angeles were as well, although they were both top-40 stations when Westinghouse purchased them. In 1965, WINS dropped rock-and-roll to become the nation's third all-news radio station (after
XETRA serving
Los Angeles and
San Diego from
Tijuana,
Mexico, and
WAVA in
Arlington,
Virginia). Westinghouse eventually took KFWB down that path as well.
By the beginning of the
1970s, WBZ evolved into an
Adult Contemporary Full Service format playing several songs an hour between 6 and 9 a.m., 10 to 12 songs an hour between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. and 4 to 6 songs an hour between 4 and 7 p.m.. At night WBZ programmed talk shows with such personalities as Guy Mainella, a pioneer in sports talk; Jerry Williams, in the evenings; and Larry Glick's entertaining overnight show (the latter two held the same popular shifts at WMEX years earlier). They also programmed music during the day on weekends. Westinghouse offered a similar format on 1020
KDKA Pittsburgh.
Beginning in the late
1960s, WBZ made a major push into live play-by-play sports. From
1966 through the seventies, and again for a time in the early nineties, WBZ was home to radio broadcasts of
New England Patriots football. In the Fall of
1969, WBZ became the radio flagship of both the
Boston Bruins (
NHL) and the
Boston Celtics (
NBA). The Bruins stayed through the 1977-78 season; the Celtics left WBZ after the team's 1980-81 NBA Championship season. During the years when the Bruins and Celtics were both on WBZ and both playing at the same time, one of them (usually the Celtics) would be heard on then-sister station WBZ-FM (now WMJX).
In the 1980s WBZ cut back the music slightly. WBZ continued the Full Service AC format until January of
1991 when they began wall to wall
Gulf War coverage along with other news during the day. After that WBZ became strictly talk and news. At that point WBZ began a morning news block until 10 a.m. and also ran all news from 4 to 7 p.m.. In 1992 WBZ dropped the midday talk shows and became an all news station during the day and talk at night. During the
1990s, David Brudnoy had a popular nighttime show on WBZ radio, but his career was cut short by
AIDS. In the summer of 2007, evening talk host Paul Sullivan stepped down as Brudnoy's successor, due to health issues stemming from a battle with cancer (Sullivan eventually lost that battle on September 9, 2007.)
In recent years, the all-news format on weekdays has been extended until 8 p.m. The Boston Bruins returned to WBZ in October of 1995, and have remained there ever since. The 2006/2007 NHL season will mark WBZ's eleventh season as the Bruins' flagship station (the 2004/2005 season was cancelled due to a labor dispute).
Hall of Fame
In February 2007, the station created the WBZ Radio Hall of Fame. Gary Lapierre is the first honoree.
Notes and references
Further Information
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