MarcB said:
That was before my time, but last night I was just discussing the station past and present with a new co-worker of mine at Walmart, who just happens to have been WNTY's News Director back around 84. Apparently WNTY was the station to listen to if you liked sports. He told me in addition to local play by play from Southington High School they carried The Mets, The Whalers, The Patriots, and The Univerisity of Hartford Hawks Basketball.
I believe also for a time WNTY did the Celtics games but I can't say for sure.
The first year I was there, WNTY would broadcast the Saturday Southington High School Football games on a tape-delayed basis on Saturdays at 4 PM because there was a Spanish-language religious program on from 1-4 PM with a strict no pre-empt clause in the contract. Most high schools did not have lights installed at their fields at the time so that was the only option. Later that Spring, we broadcast Southington High School baseball games during Carl Pavano's senior year. We can always tell when he was pitching because those games were usually over in about an hour. We get all the way to their state championship game and we didn't air that game because of that same no pre-empt clause...turns out that program was only charged $25 an hour. :
I recall during that same year, we would broadcast a night game and on a couple of occasions, the station's Sunwatch timer system would trip and shut the transmitter off during the broadcast. The Sunwatch system would not let us turn the main transmitter back on so we had to switch over to the station's 30-watt auxiliary transmitter just to finish the broadcast...we were only supposed to be on at 5-watts flea power.
A few years later, we did Plainville High Football in addition to Southington High games. We also were on the New Haven Ravens Radio Network for a season or 2 before the Ravens became the New Hampshire FisherCats. I also recall on Thanksgiving Day, we would broadcast 3 high school football games - usually the Southington game live with the Bristol Central-Bristol Eastern game (The Battle of the Bristol Bell) and the Plainville-St. Paul game on tape.
I can also recall producing a Polish show there that aired on Sundays on cassette tape and because of a speed dubbing mechanism on the cassette machine, I was able to produce a one-hour show in about 45 minutes, give or take 5. ;D
In 1998, WNTY was the first station to start the NB Rockcats radio network.
And since the thread's title is 990's Night Signal, I would be remiss if I didn't mention the time around the Winter of 1995 when we had a guy who would come in on Sunday nights and the first 2 things he would do when he walked in were to turn the transmitter back up to full daytime power and turn the tower lights off - this was at night in the dead of winter. :
Ah, what memories. It's a damn shame that what's become of Cinderblock Central since I left has become a...damn shame.
