WBER

WBER is a listener and school district supported community radio station in Rochester, New York, United States, owned and operated by the BOCES, Monroe #1. The station was founded in 1985. The call letters correspond to BOCES Educational Radio, with the pre-1985 call letters (WRHR) corresponding to Rush Henrietta Radio, the original licensee of the station (the Rush-Henrietta Central School District). The station's playlist is Alternative radio, with some new titles added to the regular rotation via a "test track," listener-reporting mechanism. WBER also presents local concerts by popular performers.

WBER
Broadcast areaRochester, New York
Frequency90.5 (MHz)
SloganThe only station that matters
Programming
FormatAlternative radio
Ownership
OwnerMonroe BOCES #1
History
First air date1975 (as WRHR)
1987 (as WBER)
Former call signsWRHR (1975–1987)
Call sign meaningBOCES Educational Radio
Technical information
ClassB1
ERP2,500 watts
HAAT127 meters
Links
Websitewber.monroe.edu

Pre-WBER history

As WRHR, the station was a student-run club operated out of the Rush Henrietta School District. The station was granted a low-power Class D license (10 watts) in 1975. The radio format was at first Top-40, and eventually included "alternative" music by bands such as the B-52's and Talking Heads. School board meetings were also broadcast on a tape-delayed basis. The school district provided support for students who broadcast live play-by-play basketball from schools within the local Section V scholastic athletic conference. In the first year of operation the Station Manager was Brad Landon, a High School Senior afflicted with muscular dystrophy, and Landon had the first show that was broadcast.

Partnership with Monroe BOCES

In 1985 WRHR was acquired by the Monroe BOCES #1 Technology Department, renamed WBER (effective March 2, 1987), and upgraded to 2,500 watts. Since that time WBER has been serving the Rochester, NY and Western New York area as a training ground for students and other members of the community interested in learning about radio broadcasting. Through the BOCES partnership, WBER programming originates in part from area school districts, including Fairport, Webster, and Brighton.

Notable shows

New Wave Wednesday, formerly hosted by Jennifer V (former program director at the now defunct WMAX-Rochester), airs Wednesday mornings. It features New wave music, giveaways, and occasional guests. Jennifer V has won the City Paper's "Best Radio Personality" award,[1] and has been highlighted in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.[2] Jennifer V's last show as host of New Wave Wednesday was June 19, 2019.

gollark: It's a terrible solution.
gollark: They have a superintelligent AI! I'm sure it can deal with it!
gollark: And the scythe organization is horrific and ridiculous too, see.
gollark: Unwanted death is still bad! Especially when they can just not have it!
gollark: Many people have already been convinced that death is good somehow.

See also

References

  1. "BEST OF ROCHESTER '09: Readers' Choice". Rochester City Newspaper. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
  2. Wallace, Daniel (June 28, 2008). "'Jennifer V' thrives with people skills and passion". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.

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