Re: The 100,000 Rule
I remember when WJDM was oldies. I have about an hour of airchecks of them as an oldies station. One of the few to dare compete with WCBS-FM. That was around 1992.
>
> * The WJDM story is a perfect example of American capitalism
> at work. WJDM pleaded its case to the FCC that it needed a
> full-time signal in order to properly serve the public of
> Elizabeth, NJ, since they were the only radio station in
> town. However, once WJDM got its big 10,000-watt full-time
> signal on the air, it was no surprise that the close
> proximity between Elizabeth, NJ and New York City allowed
> 1660 WJDM to effectively serve the NYC area instead... and
> within months, 1660 was sold to Children's Broadcasting, who
> used it to put their "Radio Aahs" format on the air in NYC
> -- completely forgetting about providing any local
> programming for the residents of Elizabeth, beyond the
> original daytimer 1530 WJDM which still remains on the air
> today. 1660 (now WWRU) has now even changed its city of
> license to Jersey City, leaving Elizabeth back to square
> one: a moderately big city with no full-time local radio. I
> don't really blame the Radio Aahs folks, though; they had an
> excellent format, and it's a shame that Radio Disney totally
> ripped them off, forcing Aahs out of business, even though
> Radio Disney is a far cry from the type of innovative
> non-Disney-ized programming that Aahs offered.
>
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