600 miles??? Are you referring to daytimer WWGB in Maryland???? I'm not aware of any stations that broadcast on 1030 at night for at least a thousand miles or so which are generally located south of Boston...And for the most part they are on low power and nulled toward Boston as well...
Thank you!
This was about the best thing I've read on this thread so far. It shows that WBZ still has some reach over-the-air, and that it IS worth preserving its heritage.
But if AM listenership as a whole is declining with every passing year, that must mean the number of out-of-market skywave listeners -- be they hobbyists or just outliers who prefer programming from far away to what's available on the local dial -- is barely measurable these days.
Exactly. The cable news channels are pre-recorded all night too.
WBZ wasn't 24/7 news under CBS either.
Yes and since it seems traffic is still live they have someone in the room for big overnight breaking news. It's not like there's no one there to hold it down while someone wakes up a real news anchor.
That 38 states and a bunch of provinces thing was gone and forgotten many decades ago.
After the clear channels were broken down, additional signals put on 1030 at night as close as 600 miles away, and stations in other countries in the hemisphere boosted power, that fabled coverage went away.
Few people listen to those old 1-A clears outside their regular coverage area due to increasing noise, far more local clear FM signals, and lack of usage of radio at night. The only purpose of having a 50 kw AM station today is to overcome high local noise levels within the metro area.
And THAT is EXACTLY why WBZ should keep their overnight live and local talk. There is NOTHING else on at night - not on TV or another radio station. They have a monopoly during those hours.
The traffic is outsourced - those people are not in the WBZ studios.
The question I have is - if no one listens to late night radio - why do the stations bother even keeping the transmitter on?
We have a station here that has been doing local talk successfully overnight with the community supporting it but let's dump it cause some guy looking at a spreadsheet a few hundred miles from Boston thought a few more dollars could be shifted toward his own bonus.
There are no advertisers for radio at that hour. That's why no one does it. Even satellite radio where subscribers pay is taped.
I'll be listening to something else.
That list is missing most Latin American countries.
It does not include stations on 1030 with power up to 100 kw in:
Haiti
Ecuador
Colombia
El Salvador
Chile
Peru
Bolivia
There are no advertisers for radio at that hour. That's why no one does it. Even satellite radio where subscribers pay is taped.
Starting and stopping causes more wear and tear than keeping something on. That's basic science.
Wrong. The trucking channel is live, with phone calls. MLB and NHL channels have wrap-up highlights and talk shows after the last West Coast games end. They run from 1-3 a.m. Eastern, I believe, and include live talk. Not sure about NBA as I'm not enough of a fan of the league to listen.
And of course you don't mean "no advertisers" literally. All the commercial stations have ads on their overnight shows but they're usually bulk buys and response-based stuff. Obviously, the cost of these spots is rock-bottom, but "no advertisers" is untrue.
Another person who didn't listen to WBZ at night. They get a lot of callers from other states and they are listening on the sky wave signal. WBZ is loud and clear out into Chicago, Buffalo, NYC, NJ, down the Atlantic seaboard. Yes some people are on the iheart app but most not.
MLB and NHL channels have wrap-up highlights and talk shows