WNIR (FM)

WNIR
City Kent, Ohio
Broadcast area Akron metropolitan area
Branding WNIR 100 FM
Slogan The Talk of Akron
Frequency 100.1 MHz
First air date February 19, 1962
Format Talk
ERP 4,200 watts
HAAT 120 meters (394 feet)
Class A
Facility ID 41077
Transmitter coordinates 41°06′28.00″N 81°21′19.00″W / 41.1077778°N 81.3552778°W / 41.1077778; -81.3552778
Callsign meaning "WINneR 100"
(former slogan)
Former callsigns WKNT-FM (196279)
Affiliations Westwood One Network
Salem Radio Network
ABC News Radio
Owner Media-Com, Inc.
(Media-Com, Inc.)
Sister stations W16DO-D, WAOH-CD, WJMP
Webcast Listen Live
Website wnir.com

WNIR (100.1 MHz) branded WNIR 100 FM is a commercial FM talk radio station. WNIR is licensed to Kent, Ohio, and serves the Akron metro area. Owned by Media-Com, Inc., the station airs mostly local shows in the day and evening, while carrying nationally syndicated personalities Jim Bohannon and Mike Gallagher at night. The WNIR studios are in Franklin Township, while the station transmitter is located on Holiday Drive near Interstate 76 in Kent.[1] In addition to a standard analog transmission, WNIR is available online.

History

The station first signed on the air on February 19, 1962, as WKNT-FM.[2] It shared its call letters with its sister station AM 1520 WKNT (now WJMP) which signed on two years later, and most programming was simulcast on both stations. The stations were owned by the publisher of the Kent Ravenna Record-Courier newspaper and primarily served the Portage County area with an adult contemporary radio format.

The stations were purchased in 1972 by Media-Com, Inc., a family-owned business headed by Richard Klaus. Klaus lured a young Howie Chizek from Youngstown to host a five-hour midday talk show, changing the station's history forever. The call sign for the FM station was changed to WNIR on April 19, 1979, and it was branded Winner 100. Eventually, the AC music was dropped, and the station became all talk, adding Joe Finan in late afternoons in 1985 to replace a "GameRadio" afternoon drive show, hosted by Bob Roberts and Joey Harper.

A cult favorite of the late 1980s and early 1990s was WNIR's "Dial A Date". The program was hosted nightly by Jim Albright. Albright would pick one "contestant" from the phone lines and talk to that person about their life for about 10 minutes. At the end of the conversation, Albright would ask late-night listeners of the opposite sex if they would like to meet the contestant. He would then answer, often live on the air, potential "date" calls. Jim Albright would sort through the prank calls and pick three potential dates for the contestant. After some talking back and forth, the contestant would pick a date and exchange phone numbers off the air.

Howie Chizek (19472012) was Northeast Ohio's "Dean of talk radio" with multiple #1 rankings for over 38 years. Chizek died June 17, 2012, in Florida at the start of his annual trip to Disney World with underprivileged children. Joe Finan retired in December 2004 and was replaced by former Cleveland Browns player Bob Golic. WNIR remains unique in this day and age dominated by syndicated talk radio with live local programming from morning to night.

WNIR began internet audio streaming of its programming on January 2, 2009, and launched an improved website. On January 14, 2011, a WNIR app for iPhones became available. WNIR announced that an app for the Droid and Blackberry would follow.

MediaCom was founded by Richard "Dick" Klaus, who died on January 28, 2006, at the age of 86. Sons Robert and William continue today with the family ownership and management of the station.

Inside Radio noted that, during Summer 2005, WNIR was the highest rated FM talk station in America in terms of market rank and market share.[3]

Current programming

When WNIR became a talk station in the 1970s, it was unusual in that it is an FM talk station, whereas most talk stations were AM. Now, talk stations on FM are fairly common, many of them aimed at younger audiences. However, WNIR has always operated as more of a traditional, AM-style talk radio station with hourly newscasts and an affiliation with ABC News Radio. WNIR does not broadcast in stereo.

WNIR's weekday schedule consists primarily of locally hosted programming. The station airs The Morning Buzz during morning drive time with Chris Fox, Angela Bellios, Steve French and Phil Ferguson. Long time morning host Stan Piatt retired in September 2013, the same month that Maggie Fuller resigned. Former Cleveland Browns Pro Bowl nose tackle Bob Golic hosts the afternoon drive show.

Longtime WNIR voice Tom Erickson was heard in the evenings until his death in 2012. Longtime NE Ohio radio personality and newspaper writer Jim Isabella was then brought in to fill the timeslot.[4][5]

Longtime midday host Howie Chizek died in June 2012. After a couple of months of guest hosts filling the midday slot, on August 10, 2012, longtime Chizek show caller John "Couch Burner" Denning became the new full-time midday host.[6] Late night programming consists of nationally syndicated shows hosted by Jim Bohannon (from Westwood One) and Mike Gallagher (from Salem Radio Network) respectively.

The station's weekday personalities also host Saturday programs until 7pm. Long-time fill-in host Bob Earley hosted a live, local weekend show until he resigned in February 2014.[7] The Saturday and Sunday evening slot was filled by Brimfield, Ohio police chief David Oliver.[8] His 7-10pm show "Breaking Good with Chief David Oliver" debuted on August 2, 2014.[9] However, "Breaking Good" was placed on hiatus January 14, 2015 when David Oliver was suspended from the Brimfield Police Department amid allegations of gender discrimination.[10] David Oliver formally resigned as Police Chief on January 16[11] and the show was dropped from the station's schedule on January 22.[12]

It was announced on June 3, 2011, that longtime Morning Show newsman Jim Midock was retiring from WNIR due to health reasons, but remains with the station hosting the Midock Minute featuring interviews with various local WNIR sponsors.

References

  1. http://radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/patg?id=WNIR-FM
  2. "The Inside Story with Mike Kinosian: FM Talk.". Ftp.media.radcity.net. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  3. "WNIR-FM - Tom Erickson". Wnir.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  4. "WNIR-FM - Program Guide". Wnir.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  5. "'Couch Burner' to succeed Howie Chizek on WNIR?". Ohio.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  6. Rich Heldenfels. "Weekend talk-show host Bob Earley latest to leave WNIR radio". Ohio.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  7. Rich Heldenfels. "Brimfield police chief to host WNIR show". Ohio.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  8. "WNIR-FM - Breaking Good with Chief David Oliver". Wnir.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  9. "Brimfield Police Chief David Oliver suspended". The Record Courier. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  10. "Ohio police chief with outsize Facebook following resigns". Toledo Blade. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  11. Trexler, Phil (2015-01-22). "Chief Oliver show dropped for good by WNIR". Akron Beacon Journal. Retrieved 2015-01-23.
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