Same here, in rural southeast Alaska. Almost every frequency has a signal at night, but there is a totally blank AM dial during the day, unless you have a decent radio and antenna. So I call it blank for practical purposes, cheap radios won't get anything during the day.
And FM can be pretty lame in SE AK too, unless you're right in a major city/town. Juneau has a whopping 18 or 19 signals now last I looked, but only a few of them are worth listening to (not religious translators, NPR relays, etc.). Many signals are translators for the same station, since that city is a Bermuda Triangle for FM reception, being long and narrow...the FM dial changes noticeably as you go from one end of town to the other!
And FM can be pretty lame in SE AK too, unless you're right in a major city/town. Juneau has a whopping 18 or 19 signals now last I looked, but only a few of them are worth listening to (not religious translators, NPR relays, etc.). Many signals are translators for the same station, since that city is a Bermuda Triangle for FM reception, being long and narrow...the FM dial changes noticeably as you go from one end of town to the other!