A few off-topic WMID notes, if I may. Deals with reception.
Badly in need of anther logging on 1230 a few years back one late afternoon, I heard some standard-issue cue-scratched Oldies* there. IDing anything with the sun still out is generally a fool's errand, but I did get that dual WMID-WCMC ID. I never heard the 1340 WMID here so far.
Back in the 60's there was a DX-club tale abut WMID being heard one night in Washington. Like the STATE of that name. Again, the mention itself was a past reference. So I have no clue whether they were on the FCC-licensed 250 nighttime watts or the newer allotment of 1000 watts like the vast majority of those old 'Class IV' frequencies.
The AM dial overnights was a lot emptier then, in the early- and mid-60s. David Eduardo, like weaving a loop, can spin some great tales about the dial being even EMPTIER previous to when I started DXing.
When I listened back in Queens NYC, the Big Apple had two share-time stations on 1330 (different tower sites). WPOW's, the more distant one, was somewhere in southern Staten Island. I give you WMID's Radio-Locator map. I lived just above the 'r' in 'New York'.
Radio Station Search Engine
radio-locator.com
That map isn't being gracious. WMID used to blast in over the water -- green grass and high tides irrespective -at times splashing onto the NYC local signal of WPOW. There abounded quite a few stories from the transistor radio days when people on Jones Beach would listen to WMID as one of the loudest stations on the dial.
That blue contour supposedly bisects Jones Beach -- the little barrier island south of Nassau County. Don't believe it. Move that blue contour several miles west.
* I'd swear I heard some of those Oldies played from CDs and mP3s that had cue burns on them.