Re: WBUD Sold; DEATH OF A PUBLIC SERVANT
The sale of WBUD to a religious broadcaster, and the station's conversion to a non-commercial entity, represents another sad chapter in the universal failure of Trenton radio stations to reach and serve the city of Trenton for the long haul. I began my radio career in Trenton in 1970, and as a kid studied Trenton radio history and its evolution from the 1960s; it's a story of universal failure of the market stations to serve the city. NJ101.5 is an unqualified success in every way, but this station's success is predicated on the state at large, not specifically metropolitan Mercer County. At every turn, when the opportunity existed to sell the concept of full service locally oriented radio back to the residents of Trenton, it's radio stations have failed. Examine these profiles:
WTTM
Following it's hey day from the late 40s to the early sixties, hosting name personalities like Ernie Kovacs, and naming itself for the famous saying on "the lower free bridge" to Morrisville, WTTM was a self-serving absentee-owned radio station. It's daytime programming was anemic, it's nighttime programming directed towards Lower Bucks County and NE Philadelphia. Subsequent ownerships have gutted WTTM, which is now limping along with paid religion, a no growth market position for commercial radio. If you don't believe me, look at all the mom and pop religious stations that are gone...and check the stock price of Salem, the leading national operator of commercial religious radio.
WAAT/WTNJ/WIMG
Although they're well entrenched today with their Gospel format directed at Trenton's African-American church community, this facility has an amazing history of bad luck and poor service. If any station could claim the name "Radio 13", this is it. Founded as WOAX in 1923, this is the oldest licensed and continuously broadcasting radio station in New Jersey. For most of it's life, it was a highly directional daytimer with a bad signal at 1300 on the dial, next to the city-located WBUD at 1260, making that swash-buckling noise when heard in the city of Trenton. Following it's own heyday as a major top 40 station, WAAT in 1965 upgraded, on paper, their 250 non-D, to 5000 watts, 4-towers located 11 miles north of Trenton, and decided to copy the success of WEEZ Chester as a station for " the New York-Philadelphia corridor, and direct it's programming to people who lived on either side of Trenton, from North Jersey into Bucks County, as a Country station. Two years later, having chased all listeners off the frequency, the now signal deficient WAAT returned to Top 40 from April of '67 to September of '68, then flipped WAAT to MOR, which WTTM, WBUD, WHWH, WTOA WBCB and WBJH were already doing...unoffensive client radio not directed at anyone in particular. Subsequently, the calls changed to WTNJ, making " radio 13" even more invisible. New owners attempted to recapture the golden age with " imagination radio" WIMG. To their credit, they attained nighttime service for 1300, necessitating a change of COL. Today, WIMG is a commercial Gospell radio station, but the technical improvements are more attractive on paper than they are on the radio dial. the daytime signal is fair, the nighttime is secondary in most places, terciery in others.
WHWH
With 1300 being a daytimer, a fulltime AM license was issued as late as 1963, when Nassau's WHWH debuted. Directed primarily to Princeton and the more affluent suburban areas of Mercer County, WHWH was The Trenton metro's #1 radio station for decades. As the '90s arrived, and ownership changes ocurred, WHWH's programming became less local, more satellite delivered, until it's license was surrendered for the expanded band allocation...and by this time no one cared.
WBUD
For many years WBUD was a player; a real personality MOR radio station with big stars. At nighttime, WBUD served the general Black audience with George Banister's R&B show. Although 5000 watts at 1260, WBUD nulled towards Lower Bucks, and directed it's programming towards Trenton. In 1970, WBUD flipped to top 40, never got a good hold on doing that kind of radio, and churned out dozens and dozens of on air jocks. After it's conversion to NBC's NIS format, a new owner changed the legendary WBUD call letters to WTRT, subsequent owners changed it back. The best shot WBUD had in recent times, was under the Press Broadcasting ownership, with a local information posture in the mornings and an entertainment format all day, directed at Mercer County...off-setting NJ101.5's regional and statewide appeal. New owners cut back on local programming, and recently ESPN was placed onto the facility to keep the filaments warm.
With WBUD off the market and basically out of the radio business as we all know it, another opportunity for a future radio operator to come and and serve the capitol city of Trenton is gone forever.