I can't find anything online. But it seems that station bought nearly every billboard along US 501. Pirates Voyage seems to have done this in recent years.
I never thought I would see a station in my hometown mentioned on here. I didn't listen that much, but I was glad to have a station that served the town I lived in. Eventually, certain people decided we no longer needed our own station and moved it to Boone (or more appropriately, Appalachian State Town), although still licensed to Blowing Rock. It is now used to feed an FM translator playing new music.One I was really impressed with was WVIO, a daytimer AM in Blowing Rock, NC. They were "Visitor's Radio Outlet". They ran a music format with live jocks. Their hourly clock was Calendar of Events at :60, :15, :30 and :45. Weather was at :10 and :40. Special features, 5 minutes, aired at :20 and :50. Businesses could sponsor Calendar of Events and Weather or sponsor a quarter hour of music. I was told they tried to play local musicians that play the various venues. This would have been about 1986 as a guess.
Another example of a community that takes pride in having their own local radio station, but where the rubber meets the road, won't help support it financially.I never thought I would see a station in my hometown mentioned on here. I didn't listen that much, but I was glad to have a station that served the town I lived in. Eventually, certain people decided we no longer needed our own station and moved it to Boone (or more appropriately, Appalachian State Town), although still licensed to Blowing Rock. It is now used to feed an FM translator playing new music.
WFVR was promoted as Florida Vacation Radio. I don't remember the frequency, but the station modified the directional pattern of the AM to be a long north/south lobe on I-75. In the late 80s I drove to FL from Atlanta about once a month and would hear it. The station had a good signal that was listenable for about an hour on I-75.