Does anyone remember WVNJ and what format they had in the late 60's early 70's?
Does anyone remember WVNJ and what format they had in the late 60's early 70's?
TimeIsTight said:In the 60s and 70s WVNJ-FM, used a separate national music syndication service that was fully automated "beautiful music."
It was 1980, not 1981. ( I can't believe I made that error)badjef said:"'VN-Joy' by day, 'VN-Jazz', by night".
Following WRVR dropping Jazz on 106.7 in September 1981...
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
In the 60s and 70s WVNJ-FM, used a separate national music syndication service that was fully automated "beautiful music."
Do you remember which service?
TimeIsTight said:WRFM was Bonneville.
TimeIsTight said:Greater Media had switched WCTC-FM's call letters to WQMR, for Quality Music Radio, and had plans to do beautiful music in Central Jersey using its own GM BM syndication service out of DC. Instead, WQMR became WMGQ, and switched to Julian Breen's "Magic" format.
TheBigA said:I think the first to flip was WTFM to WAPP in 1982.
"That's 'T'-fm" - sloganradioguy39nj said:TheBigA said:I think the first to flip was WTFM to WAPP in 1982.
WTFM actually did a soft rock format from about 1979 until the sale to Doubleday in 1982 and the flip to WAPP. The station was branded "The Mellow T". It filled in the soft rock/AC gap left when WKTU flipped to disco and WYNY was experimenting with music and talk. When WYNY found its traction as a Hot AC station in 1980, the handwriting was on the wall for WTFM.![]()
radioguy39nj said:WTFM actually did a soft rock format from about 1979 until the sale to Doubleday in 1982 and the flip to WAPP. The station was branded "The Mellow T". It filled in the soft rock/AC gap left when WKTU flipped to disco and WYNY was experimenting with music and talk.
Great ratings for FM stations but no threat to the prevailing AM's.TheBigA said:The funny part about New York radio is the number of beautiful music stations it had all at the same time: WRFM, WVNJ, WPAT, and WTFM all did basically the same format, and all got great ratings.
ai4i said:Great ratings for FM stations but no threat to the prevailing AM's.
Almost every FM station in North America either simulcasted their AM or ran "Beautiful Music" because it was cheap.
I remember when Miami and Fort Lauderdale, which were separate markets, had about eight or nine of'em.
I always wondered about why 98.3 in New Brunswick was using the calls WQMR, when at the time all they were doing was simulcasting WCTC on 98.3. This lasted quite awhile too. They were in mono!
DavidEduardo said:The soft rock format was a "holding pattern" format. The owner, Friendly Frost, was in bankruptcy and a sale was being negotiated. The first sale, in mid-1979, to Pueblo International, fell apart when Pueblo's recently sold Hill's Supermarket division folded, leaving Pueblo liable for the leases and unable to close on the $8.5 million purchase. So Friendly Frost tried to operate as cheaply as possible until a new owner came forward and the FCC got around to approving.