WHTR moved into the Albany market from
Corinth (when it was moved to 93.7 MHz to protect
WZCR's signal) in 2002, signing on at 3:00 p.m. on April 22, 2001. The call letters initially remained WHTR at that time, and took on the
Hot Talk 93.7 name with a
hot talk format and simulcast on AM 1400 (the original WABY, now known as
WAMC). The station's key personalities were former
WPYX morning co-host
John Mulrooney in morning drive and the syndicated
Opie and Anthony show in afternoon drive; most weekend programming was a simulcast of
K-Rock WKRL Syracuse, albeit with local ads. Within four months, Mulrooney was fired and the "Sex for Sam" incident ended
Opie and
Anthony's original syndication attempt. Outside of drivetimes, the WKRL simulcasts on WHTR-FM were the highest rated programs on the station (impressive given the presence of two full-time stations, WHRL (now
WGY-FM) and WQBK-FM (now
WPBZ-FM), in the market). With a hole to quickly fill, on August 30, 2002, the station took on the
WKRD calls and flipped to
modern rock as
K-Rock 93.7. The station became notable for hiring former
WGY afternoon host JR Gach for mornings in January 2003 after being released from WGY. This format was simulcast on 1400 until Galaxy sold that station in April 2003. However, on January 22, 2004, WKRD abruptly flipped to
classic country as
93.7 The Eagle, taking on the
WEGB calls, which were quickly switched to
WEGQ to alleviate confusion with television station
WRGB. For nearly two years, WEGQ played
Dial Global satellite-fed classic country music from the 1960s to 1980s. The station had only one local personality under this format, former
WYJB afternoon personality Chris Holmberg who left for Galaxy on the heels of WYJB's first #1 (12+) ratings book. On January 4, 2006, after simulcasting the
Eagle format on
WRCZ (which was formerly
94 Rock) for about a week, the station relaunched as
93.7/94.5 The Bone, taking on the
WOOB calls.
The Bone had a
mainstream rock format with the tagline
Everything That Rocks, and featured
J. R. Gach in mornings with co-host Pi and traffic gal Alecia. On February 16, 2007, the
Bone format ended anticlimactically right in the middle of the song "Ride the River" by
Eric Clapton, when Galaxy Communications exited the Albany market and sold both stations to Educational Media Fund in a
fire sale. WOOB was converted to an
Air 1 O&O, broadcasting a
Christian CHR format, and later changed its calls to
WYAI several months later on July 6, 2007. ==References==