Радіо WFLY-FM (Fly 92)

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WFLY (Fly 92.3) is a Contemporary Hit Radio radio station licensed to Troy, New York and serving New York's Capital District as well as the surrounding areas, including the Adirondacks. The station is owned by Pamal Broadcasting (and was the first station purchased by that company) and broadcasts at 92.3 FM at 17 kilowatts ERP from the Helderberg Mountains antenna farm in New Scotland.

WFLY signed on in 1948 as the radio station of the Troy Record newspaper, then published by Frank Loyd York. The station initially played classical music,... Дізнатися більше

Troy FM|92.3
(518)476-9200
6 Johnson RdCohoes, NY 12047
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WFLY (Fly 92.3) is a Contemporary Hit Radio radio station licensed to Troy, New York and serving New York's Capital District as well as the surrounding areas, including the Adirondacks. The station is owned by Pamal Broadcasting (and was the first station purchased by that company) and broadcasts at 92.3 FM at 17 kilowatts ERP from the Helderberg Mountains antenna farm in New Scotland.

WFLY signed on in 1948 as the radio station of the Troy Record newspaper, then published by Frank Loyd York. The station initially played classical music, for several years being part of a network which originated at WQXR in New York City. However by the late 1960s this became a losing proposition and in 1970 the station switched to a Top 40/Oldies Rock format with live DJs. At that point they were known as "The Big 92". DJs on "The Big 92" included Craig Stevens, Gary Mitchell, Rex Gregory, Dale Lane, Bob Harris, Bob Roberts, Johnny Lance and Chris Calvert. Though the station (the first commercial FM rock station in the Albany market) did very well with the new format, protests over the format flip among classical music listeners were intense and a partial victory was claimed in late 1971 when the Troy Record sold WFLY to Functional Broadcasting and the station flipped to an easy listening/classical hybrid. The partial return of classical was not successful given the sign-on of WMHT-FM as a full time classical station shortly after WFLY flipped and established three easy listening outlets in the market.

Functional lost money on WFLY from the outset and sold the station in early 1975. After the sale the station flipped to automated Album Oriented Rock, billing itself as "sophisticated rock". WFLY went adult contemporary in 1977, and than drifted back to Top 40 in 1979. The station was sold to Rob Dyson, who also owned WPDH and WEOK in Poughkeepsie, New York. It was sold to Jim Morrell in 1988 and is considered the flagship station for Albany/Pamal Broadcasting. The second go-around of Top 40 was the charm as WFLY caused the eventual deaths of AM powerhouses WTRY and WPTR in the following years and led to the deaths of most rivals though two stations, WGFM/WGY-FM from 1982-90 and WKKF since 2000 have survived for an extended period. In 2005, the station tweaked its format to be more modern rock-leaning to separate itself more from competitors WKKF and WAJZ; however, over time, the station has reverted back to a more normal contemporary hit radio format.

In July 2007, a number of personnel left WFLY, including afternoon jocks Mick Lee (to KKRZ in Portland, OR) and Christy Taylor (to sister station WZMR), overnight jock Mr. Alex (to NYC for commercial production), and promotions director JoAnn Razzano. Currently, the station staff is: The FLY Morning Rush (Brian Cody and Chrissy Cavotta) (5:30am-10am), Terry O'Donnell on Middays (10am-2pm) Marissa in the Afternoon (2pm-7pm), Tanch with the World Famous Night Show (7pm-12am), and Jay Gotti in the Overnight (12am-5:30am).

In May 2008, it was announced that WFLY would be bringing back "Summer Jam," a concert the station is well known for but hasn't put on in almost a decade. Also, during the summer of 2008, WFLY introduced a new format for their long-running contest Last Student Standing. The contest, which had formerly been a last man standing, month-long torture aboard a school bus, was converted into a reality show format coined "Reality Radio". 8 college students moved into an emptied out store in Clifton Park Center and voted each other out week after week.

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