WHRV | |
City: | Norfolk, Virginia |
Area: | Hampton Roads |
Branding: | WHRV 89.5 |
Format: | Public Radio - News - Talk - Jazz - Americana |
Subchannels: | HD2: Adult Album Alternative (AAA) "AltRadio" |
Translator: | 101.7 W269BQ (Virginia Beach) |
Erp: | 34,000 watts |
Haat: | 181.7m (596.1feet) |
Class: | B |
Facility Id: | 25933 |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
Coordinates: | 36.8089°N -76.5036°W |
Callsign Meaning: | Hampton Roads Virginia |
Owner: | Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications Association |
Sister Stations: | WFOS, WHRE, WHRF, WHRG, WHRJ, WHRL, WHRO-FM, WHRO-TV, WHRX |
Website: | WHRV.org/radio |
WHRV (89.5 MHz) is a non-commercial, listener-supported, public radio station licensed to Norfolk, Virginia.[1] It is the flagship NPR member station for the Hampton Roads section of Virginia, and is a sister station to the area's PBS member, WHRO-TV 15. They are owned by the Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications Association, a consortium of 19 school districts in Hampton Roads and the Eastern Shore.[2] Studios are in the Public Telecommunications Center on the campus of Old Dominion University in Norfolk.
WHRV is a Class B FM station. It has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 34,000 watts. The transmitter is on Nansemond Parkway in Suffolk.Radio-Locator.com/WHRV Programming is also heard on four repeater stations and an FM translator. WHRV broadcasts using HD Radio (hybrid) technology.[3] Its HD2 digital subchannel plays adult album alternative (AAA) music and is known as "AltRadio."
On weekdays, WHRV airs news and talk programming from NPR and other public radio networks. Weekday programs include Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Fresh Air, 1A, Here and Now and Marketplace. Shows heard once a week, either middays or on weekends, include The TED Radio Hour, Radiolab, Reveal, The Splendid Table, On The Media, Science Friday, A Way with Words, Selected Shorts, With Good Reason, Snap Judgment, Left, Right and Center and Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. The BBC World Service runs all night.
Nights and weekends, there are programs featuring multiple genres of music not found on commercial radio stations. Locally produced shows include Out of the Box with Paul Shagrue, a mix of Americana, Blues, Reggae, Singer-Songwriter, Cajun and World Beat. Friday evenings feature The R&B Chronicles with Jae Sinnett airing classic Rhythm & Blues music. Pickin' airs on Sunday evenings, featuring two hours of bluegrass and traditional country music. Acoustic Highway with Barry Graham ranges from classic bluegrass and traditional Appalachian music to songs of the new folk movement. WHRV also carries NPR's The Thistle and Shamrock with Fiona Ritchie, featuring Celtic music from Scotland, Ireland, Canada and the U.S.
The station signed on the air in .[4] Its original call sign was WTGM. It was owned by the Virginia Cultural Foundation.[4] WTGM-FM aired a mix of classical music, NPR news and community programs.[5]
Within only two years, however, the station ran into severe financial problems. That forced HRETA (then known as the Hampton Roads Educational Television Association) to step in and rescue the station.[6]
HRETA changed the call letters to WHRO-FM in 1978. The new call sign would match the radio and television stations. In the early 1980s, a feasibility study indicated that a second public radio station could be viable.[4] The plan was one station would specialize in classical music, while the other would concentrate on informational and news programs, along with some other genres of music. However, it was not until 1988 that HRETA won a second noncommercial license, on 90.3 MHz.[7] On September 21, 1990, 90.3 FM signed on as a full-time classical music station, taking the WHRO-FM call letters. NPR news and information programming remained on 89.5 under new call letters, WHRV.[8]
Channel | ||
---|---|---|
HD-1 | 89.5 WHRV | |
HD-2 | AltRadio | |
WHRV operates a number of full-powered repeater stations to serve portions of the Eastern Shore and Southside Virginia.
Additionally, the station operates a 250 watt translator station, W269BQ, at 101.7 MHz in Virginia Beach, which serves sections of that community that do not get a clear signal from 89.5.