WPTR began as long running
middle-of-the-road station WSNY in 1942. In 1968, WSNY flipped to
Top 40, going into direct competition with more powerful and established stations WPTR (now
WDCD) and WTRY (now
WOFX). The format was initially a success. However, by the early 1970s, FM Top 40 began to take hold in the Albany market as well; by 1973, in addition to WPTR and WTRY, WSNY had to contend with WABY (now
WAMC), WGFM (now
WRVE), and WHSH (now
WPYX). In 1974, WSNY left the air. In 1976, the station returned to the air as WWWD, with kind of a top 40/oldies hybrid format. WWWD began to add vast amounts of
off-track betting racing to their schedule during the 1980s. In early 1988, the station became WVKZ and partially simulcasted WVKZ-FM (now
WMHH), with their rock based top 40 format. WVKZ drifted through various formats during the 1990s, including
classic country and
talk, before flipping to oldies in 2004. In February 2009, WVKZ started broadcasting
Scott Shannon's
True Oldies network after broadcasting as "Real Oldies" since 2004.
Ernie Anastos sold his Albany-area stations—WVKZ,
WABY,
WQAR, and
WUAM and its translator W291BY—to Empire Broadcasting Corporation in June 2012 at a purchase price of $1.2 million. The transaction consummated on September 7, 2012. On September 8, 2012 the station adopted the historic WPTR call letters, formerly used on the stations now known as WDCD,
WAJZ, and WMHH. On June 7, 2013 WPTR changed their format to sports. On June 27, 2016 WPTR changed their format from sports to a simulcast of business news-formatted
WAIX 1160 AM Mechanicville, branded as "Empire News Network". On May 15, 2018, WPTR and its sister AM stations went silent (off the air). On December 31, 2019 WPTR was sold to Area Independent Radio, Inc., a group led by two retired professors from
Union College. WPTR currently operates a full time studio located at the Via Port Mall in
Rotterdam, New York. WPTR officially went back on the air as a classic rock station, featuring music from 60s thru the 90s, as well as featuring the AOR (
album-oriented rock) format made popular in the 1970s. The station's format is styled after the era of WPTR's popular DJ 'Boom Boom Branigan' and features some nostalgia, including vintage jingles of the 50s and 60s.
Full-service trappings include an apolitical news department,
Albany Patroons basketball, and ethnic programming on weekends. ==History of call letters==