RE "How to brew coffee on an outside grill."
I heard that too.
GREAT bit.
Great "diary radio," in-that it's-likely-to-be-remembered...quoted even.
Having survived even-more-extreme circumstances when we covered The Great Blizzard of '78, I'm especially impressed by how WPRO rallied. It was solid radio.
That said, I think what WHJJ did was SMART...DARN smart, under the circumstances.
'JJ isn't staffed-up to grow-their-own a la WPRO coverage; and simulcasting NBC10 gave listeners who were in-car and/or lights-out access to trusted NBC10 content.
This wasn't just a convenience. It's very in-step-with the way people now expect to access stuff on multiple devices...even when the power isn't failing. Think "app."
Nothing else 920 could've done would've been more useful...or more valuable promotion, based on all the plugs the radio station got on TV.
And, after all, many 55+ listeners -- radio's highest AQH contributors -- remember 920AM and TV10 as siblings. And TV mentions + power outages forced AM use by younger listeners who now "get" that NBC10 weather is available in-car on 920.
If life had a Rewind button, simulcasting on 93.3 not only would've made the station even-more-handy, but it would've shown seemingly-reluctant Clear Channel that they're missing-a-bet not simulcasting full-time. And I say so (a) with-all-due-respect to WSNE staffers, and (b) as a former WSNE program director.
HC
http://wp.me/pl9ir-x0