Broadcast area | Central New York |
---|---|
Frequency | 88.3 MHz (HD Radio) |
Branding | WAER 88.3 FM |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Format | Jazz/News/Sports |
Subchannels | HD2: Jazz 88 |
Affiliations | NPR |
Ownership | |
Owner | Syracuse University [1] |
WERW WJPZ-FM | |
History | |
First air date | April 1, 1947 |
Call sign meaning | W Alpha Epsilon Rho (informally, Always Excellent Radio) |
Technical information [2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 64354 |
Class | B |
ERP | 50,000 watts |
HAAT | 84 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°02′02″N76°07′52″W / 43.0339°N 76.1311°W |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen Live Listen live (via TuneIn) |
Website | waer |
WAER (88.3 FM) is a radio station in Syracuse, New York. It is located on the campus of Syracuse University, and is a part of the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. [3] The station features a jazz music and National Public Radio format, with a news, Syracuse Orange play-by-play, and music staff providing programming around the clock.
It is best known for its sports staff, which has produced the likes of Bob Costas, Mike Tirico, and many others. Lou Reed also hosted a free-format show on WAER during his time at Syracuse University; this free-format radio tradition at Syracuse is carried on by WERW. Other alums include Ted Koppel, Jerry Stiller and Dick Clark. The station is managed by full-time professional staff and employs as many as 50 students each semester. [4] [5] [6]
Radio programming began on the university campus as early as 1931, [7] the year when AM station WSYR-WMAC in Syracuse built its new transmitter site on the university campus. This station employed the WMAC call sign only when it carried Syracuse University programming originating from Crouse College. [8] [9] In late 1933 the call sign was changed to WSYR-WSYU, with WSYU, being used when broadcasting the university programs. [10] [11] In 1940, the use of dual call letters was ended, and this station became just WSYR.
On April 1, 1947, an experimental low-powered educational FM station began broadcast at 88.1 MHz as WJIV-FM, primarily as a practical workshop for SU radio students, [12] [13] becoming first class D educational station in the nation. [11] After three months, a license renewal from the FCC allowed the students to change the call sign letters to WAER (W Alpha Epsilon Rho), referring to the radio honorary society). [14] [15] [16] The call sign was also interpreted as Always Excellent Radio. [17] The studios, financial supported by General Electric, were located at Radio House, a set of prefabricated houses near the steps to Mount Olympus, immediately south of Carnegie Library. [14] GE provided the setup, valued at 150,000 in 1948, [18] and asked Syracuse university to experiment with this type of transmitter, in hopes of pioneering educational broadcasting by using the low-powered FM transmitters. [8] [19]
The enterprise was overseen by the dean of Radio department Kenneth G. Bartlett and professor Lawrence Myers Jr. served as the faculty manager. [12] Student staff was soon appointed to create schedule of broadcast. [18] [20] The broadcasts included classical music, sports, news, religious programs from the Hendricks Chapel, immediate university news, student activities, as well as official university events. The station operated from 4 pm to 10 pm to avoid lecture hours. [20] [21] [22] [23]
When it began in 1947, WAER was authorized radiated power of only 2.5 Watt, but in 1951 FCC granted an increase in power to 1000 watts. [8] The station began broadcasting seven hours a day, seven days a week, and became Syracuse University's permanent radio station. [20] [24] [25] By 1984, The station ran at 6,000-watt power. [17] The station had moved to the then newly-built Newhouse II building by the seventies. [11]
Up until 1983, WAER was student-run, but in a controversial decision in 1983, SU took over WAER and hired full-time professionals to run operations and train students. [7]
In 2017, a full length documentary titled "The Miracle Microphone: The Impossible History and History Makers of WAER Radio" chronicled the 70-year history of WAER. [14] The documentary was researched and produced by Scott MacFarlane and Keith Kobland and won New York state AP Press Association award in 2019. [19] [26] [27]
Formerly a component of the auxiliary services department, the station became part of the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications in July 2021. [16] The station continues to be housed at Haft Hall, 795 Ostrom Ave, where it has been located since 2003. [11]
The station programming includes jazz music, [28] [29] NPR programming, news, [30] Syracuse Orange play-by-play, [31] and special reporting projects. [32] [33]
The WAER sports staff is made up entirely of students, [34] who report on home and away games. [35] It provides daily sports updates as well as play-by-play for Syracuse University football, men's basketball, and men's lacrosse. A pregame show begins 30 minutes before each broadcast (Countdown to Kickoff, Tipoff, or Faceoff) with a halftime segment (Orange at the Half) and a postgame wrap-up (Orange Overtime). The Double Overtime, a full-length postgame talk show, airs after every football, basketball, and lacrosse game. Sports Nite airs weekly on Friday nights. [36]
The music department is organized by Eric Cohen, multiple-time winner of National Jazz Programmer of the Year. [28] [29] Larry Hoyt is the longtime voice of Common Threads on WAER. Cora Thomas is the office supervisor and runs gospel music programming, as she maintains a Sunday morning show on WAER airing from 6-8AM.
Since February 2010, WAER has partnered with Syracuse University's WERW 1570 (later 1670). WERW is a student-run, free-format station, which returned to the air in 2017 after six years of only being available through iTunes radio. [37] The partnership has resulted in a weekly, 3-hour show, called Real College Radio on WAER, which is hosted by alternating reps of a select cohort of WERW DJs. The genre is adult album alternative (AAA), and each DJ brings their own new flavor to the WAER offerings.
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The S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, commonly known as the Newhouse School, is the communications and journalism school of Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York. It has undergraduate programs in advertising; broadcast and digital journalism; esports communications and management; magazine, news, and digital journalism; public relations; television, radio and film; visual communications; and music business. Its master's programs includes advanced media management; advertising; audio arts; broadcast and digital journalism; Goldring arts journalism and communications; magazine, news and digital journalism; media studies; multimedia, photography and design; public diplomacy and global communications; public relations; and television, radio and film. The school was named after publishing magnate Samuel Irving Newhouse Sr., founder of Advance Publications, who provided the founding gift in 1964.
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Serving as a practical workshop for Syracuse university radio students, FM Station WAER is a non-commercial station located on the campus of Syracuse university and is managed by Larry Myers. Broadcasting on an assigned frequency of 88.1. mc, WAER has a power output of two and a half watts, which not only covers the campus, but a radius of about three miles.
The five students who helped launch WAER-FM radio on April 1, 1947: Charles Reichblum, John Kurtz, Jerry Adler Ehrla Niman Lapinsky, and James Cohan.
The following year [after 1946], the campus radio station, WAER, was founded
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