I'm thinking of WGHJ 105.3 FM, licensed to Fair Bluff NC. A Myrtle Beach SC newspaper wrote about this station about a decade ago, saying the market was getting a second "beach music" station. Essentially, that means the African-American artists kids danced to when they went to the beach but couldn't hear on the radio back in the 50s, and music related to that from the 60s and 70s.
94.9 the Surf with its superior signal and a longer heritage kept this station from having any success, and it's too far from anywhere to be part of a major market. It started out as a simulcast partner of a Wilmington NC station.
A few years ago WGHJ sold out to a Christian broadcaster. Good News Network already had a translator In Myrtle Beach so WGHJ doesn't need one, but around that same time WRNN added a translator at 105.5, which pretty much keeps WGHJ from being heard. WRNN changed its letters to WWHK when it became classic country Hank FM.
But if WGHJ had tried to make it as a separate station, could they have protested the Hank translator, claiming they had a chance at being a part of the Myrtle Beach market? Or, if the station that became hank had chosen a different frequency after the protest, could WGHJ have gotten a translator--maybe the one at 105.5? I've heard AMs can't extend their range, but at least one Myrtle Beach FM had a translator at one time. Not that it needed it. The signal is really good.
94.9 the Surf with its superior signal and a longer heritage kept this station from having any success, and it's too far from anywhere to be part of a major market. It started out as a simulcast partner of a Wilmington NC station.
A few years ago WGHJ sold out to a Christian broadcaster. Good News Network already had a translator In Myrtle Beach so WGHJ doesn't need one, but around that same time WRNN added a translator at 105.5, which pretty much keeps WGHJ from being heard. WRNN changed its letters to WWHK when it became classic country Hank FM.
But if WGHJ had tried to make it as a separate station, could they have protested the Hank translator, claiming they had a chance at being a part of the Myrtle Beach market? Or, if the station that became hank had chosen a different frequency after the protest, could WGHJ have gotten a translator--maybe the one at 105.5? I've heard AMs can't extend their range, but at least one Myrtle Beach FM had a translator at one time. Not that it needed it. The signal is really good.