The station signed on the air in 1947; 77 years ago (1947).[citation needed] WYSL-FM was the FM counterpart to WYSL 1400 AM, now known as WWWS. The station switched its call sign to WPHD in 1970. WPHD mostly simulcast WYSL but played free formunderground music overnight. The rock format caught on with listeners, and by 1972, WPHD-FM had dethroned WKBW as Buffalo's most-listened-to station during the evening hours, the first time an FM station had achieved the feat in any daypart.[2] Despite the success, Larry Levite (representing owner Gordon McLendon) and his national program director Ken Dowe were upset that they felt the station was not playing enough hits and allowing the hosts to indulge in too much material that would not appeal to a broad audience, and thus removed over 90% of the station's playlist to bring the library down to 500 records. Evening disc jockey Jim Santella, angry at the meddling in his program, publicly resigned from his program on-air, as did local program director Jack Robinson, who had unsuccessfully tried to compromise with Dowe and Levite.[3]
This album-oriented rock format made WPHD popular, along with its morning duo, Robert W. Taylor and Harv Moore, whose show ran from 1978 to 1989.
On September 23, 1989, the station changed call signs from WPHD to WUFX, "103.3 The Fox". Taylor and Moore were fired and a new morning drive time show debuted, "Shredd and Ragan". Shredd coming from AM 1400 WXBX. The format lasted about six years. Both Taylor and Moore eventually were hired at WHTT-FM, which is now WEDG's sister station. Taylor is now retired and Moore went on to stints at WECK, WHLD, and then back to WECK. Taylor later served as WECK's imaging voice.
WEDG
On June 23, 1995, the station adopted an alternative rock format and the call sign and branding as WEDG "103.3 The Edge".[4] At the time, Toronto radio station 102.1 CFNY-FM was making inroads in Western New York, and also rebranded itself "The Edge" shortly after the sign-on of WEDG. Because CFNY is a Canadian radio station, it was outside Jacobs Media's trademark on "The Edge" radio brand for U.S. stations.
After some time playing alternative, WEDG began leaning towards a harder edged active rock direction in 2005 after then-rival 92.9 WBUF flipped from active rock to hot talk. After a few years, WEDG rotated in more "classic" hard rock/heavy metal artists alongside current and recent releases in the station playlist. WEDG was limited in how much classic material it could play, to avoid cannibalizing listeners from classic rock sister station, 96.9 WGRF. WEDG began streaming on the Internet in 2006.
Beginning in late 2014, WEDG began shifting from active rock, back to the station's heritage alternative rock roots, while still maintaining a few active rock songs in rotation. By the beginning of 2016, WEDG dropped the "Rock Radio" prefix and re-imaged the station as "Buffalo. Rock. Alternative.", reflecting a nearly 25-year tenure as Buffalo's modern rock outlet. The station usually has top ratings for Men 25–49 in the Buffalo radio market.
Shredd and Ragan were longest-serving personalities at the station, hosting the morning drive time shift from 1994. They were moved from mornings after 12 years to make way for the syndicated "Opie and Anthony" show from New York City. That marked a homecoming for Gregg "Opie" Hughes, who was a former WUFX staffer. After O&A was dropped from the schedule in July 2008, Program Director (then known as) "Evil" Jim Kurdziel hosted the morning shift on an interim basis until August 25, 2008, when midday host Rich "Bull" Gaenzler was named the permanent host. It was announced in early January 2012 that the Shredd and Ragan show was returning to mornings starting January 9, 2012.
Shredd and Ragan were reassigned to WGRF in August 2021. Cassiday Proctor and Anthony Wise were named the replacement morning team four months later. Their show is called “Cass & Anthony".[7]