The transmitter is on Stark Lane in Manchester, near Interstate 293 Exit 7.[2] WGIR is powered at 5,000 watts by day; to avoid interfering with other stations on AM 610, it reduces power at night to 1,000 watts. It uses a directional antenna at all times.
Weekend feature programs on money, health, law, technology and the Paul Parent Garden Club, as well as best-of editions of weekday programming. Some weekend shows are paid brokered programming. Syndicated weekend shows include The Tech Guy with Leo Laporte, Sunday Night Live with Bill Cunningham and Somewhere in Time with Art Bell. Most hours begin with world and national news from Fox News Radio, followed by New Hampshire news from local reporters.
An FM sister station on 95.7 MHz was added on December 21, 1947, which largely simulcast the AM station. Plans for an FM station had been in place for seven years. However, few people owned FM radios at the time and management doubted the FM station would ever be profitable. WMUR-FM was shut down December 27, 1950. The frequency is now occupied by WZID.[4][7]
WMUR-TV
A few years later, Murphy decided to apply for a television station on Channel 9. Murphy had to compete against applications from WFEA, WKBR (now WGAM), and the Manchester Union-Leader, the local daily newspaper headed by William Loeb III. Murphy won the construction permit, and WMUR-TV signed on March 28, 1954.[4][8]
Because WMUR radio was an ABC affiliate, WMUR-TV picked up programming from the ABC Television Network. WMUR and WMUR-TV broadcast from a Victorian-style house on Elm Street in Manchester.
Change in ownership
Murphy decided to sell the WMUR stations in the mid-1950s,[8] with Madeleine M. Girolimon acquiring WMUR radio for $150,000 in 1956[9] and changing the call sign to the current WGIR. (The WMUR call letters remain on channel 9, which stayed under Murphy's ownership until a few months after his death in 1958.)[8] Girolimon dropped the ABC affiliation soon after taking over.[10] WGIR picked up CBS Radio programming in 1957.[11]
Girolimon sold WGIR to Knight Quality Stations in 1961.[12] Around the same time, the station switched its network affiliation to NBC Radio.[13] Under Knight, the station decided to reenter FM broadcasting, and WGIR-FM at 101.1 MHz signed on June 5, 1963.[14] It largely simulcast the AM station in its early years.[15] In 1977, the simulcast ended as WGIR-FM switched to a soft rock format.[16]
Evolving to talk
Through the 1960s and 1970s, WGIR had a full service, middle of the road (MOR) format, mixed with some talk and sports programming.[17][14] By the early 1980s, the station evolved its music programming to adult contemporary, while adding more talk shows.[18] On December 31, 1984, WGIR ended all remaining music programming to become a full-time news/talk station.[19][20][21] In 1990, the station swapped affiliations with WFEA and returned to ABC News Radio.[22]
Knight Quality Stations announced the sale of its eight New England radio stations, including WGIR, to Capstar Broadcasting Partners in April 1997;[23][24] upon assuming control in January 1998, the stations were operated by Capstar's Atlantic Star Communications subsidiary.[25] That September, Capstar rebranded the station as the "Action News Network".[26] In addition to broadcasting on AM 610, WGIR supplied programming to Seacoast radio stations 930 WZNN (renamed WGIN) and 1540 WMYF (renamed WGIP).[27][28] WGIR switched networks again, this time dropping ABC and returning to NBC Radio.[26] NBC radio news was subsequently phased out by Westwood One in favor of CNN Radio.
iHeart ownership
Capstar and Chancellor Media announced in August 1998 that they would merge (Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst was a major shareholder in both companies);[29] upon the merger's completion in July 1999, the combined company was named AMFM Inc.[30][31] AMFM was in turn acquired by Clear Channel Communications (forerunner to iHeartMedia) in a deal announced on October 4, 1999,[32][33] and completed in August 2000.[34] For a time, Clear Channel added WGIR programming to a fourth station, WTSL 1400 AM in Hanover.[35] WGIR picked up Fox News Radio for its news network in the mid-2000s after Clear Channel signed a larger agreement with the service.[36]
WGIP left the network in 2009, after it was placed in the Aloha Station Trust and sold off due to the privatization of Clear Channel; it became classic hits-formatted WXEX,[37] and is now K-Love station WPKC. WGIN also stopped carrying WGIR programming in April 2011, switching to sports programming. It became WPKX in February 2012.[38] Most of WGIR's programming and news remains available on the Seacoast through sister station WQSO (96.7 FM).
^Brouder, Ed (January 1, 2009). "WFEA History - 1990s". Man from Mars Productions. Retrieved February 15, 2010. On January first it [WFEA] switched from ABC to NBC, allowing cross-town rival WGIR to sign with ABC News.
^Fybush, Scott (April 17, 1997). "In the Zone". North East RadioWatch. Retrieved February 15, 2010.
^"Cash-Rich Capstar Continues Capitalization". Radio & Records. April 25, 1997. p. 6.