Advertise


Advertise on Central New York’s most accessible and popular stations. WHCU 870 AM, WNYY 1470 AM, WQNY 103.7 FM, WIII 99.9 FM, WYXL 97.3 FM, WFIZ 95.5, Rewind 107.7, 96.3 The Buzzer and 96.7 The Vine.

Radio is the advertising medium that “cuts through the clutter” of thousands of messages trying to reach consumers each day.

Emotional, motivating, entertaining, and habitual. Radio captures today’s consumers with powerful REACH and critical FREQUENCY.

Radio reaches:

  • Over 234 million people every week
  • 93% of all consumers each week
  • 94% of all consumers with $75k+ incomes
  • 92% of those with two or more children in household
  • 92% of new home buyers

There’s an attractive and efficient advertising campaign for almost any business. Let the Cayuga Radio Group put the POWER of RADIO to work for YOUR business so you can “get known!”

Email Chet Osadchey or call him at 607.257.6400.

Recent Headlines

23 hours ago in Entertainment, Trending

Ryan Coogler aware of potential Oscar history ahead but focused on ‘Sinners’ team before ceremony

Ryan Coogler understands what Sunday night could mean for Oscar history. He's just not dwelling on it. Instead, the Oscar-nominated filmmaker is looking forward to spending one more night with his "Sinners" collaborators who helped bring the film to life.

23 hours ago in National, Trending

US forecasts blizzard, polar vortex, heat dome and atmospheric river all at once

Days of downpours have begun in Hawaii. The Southwest will soon bake with day after day of record 100-degree-plus (38 Celsius-plus) heat. Two storms will dump snow by the foot over northern Great Lakes states. And the dreaded polar vortex will again invade the Midwest and East with soul-crushing Arctic chill. This forecast of extremes comes as weather whiplash has already hit much of the East.

1 day ago in Olympics, Sports

Paralympians ski in shorts and T-shirts, and some ask: Shouldn’t these Games be earlier?

At this month's Milan Cortina Paralympics, some athletes competed in shorts, T-shirts and tank tops. One skier lamented "tropical" conditions and a snowboarder complained that soft, slow snow put him at a disadvantage. And some worried about their safety.