And that was when the station was a major Top 40 player with jocks like Joe Finan and Specs Howard.When I was a kid, WERE aired the rosary every evening. And they were not a religious station.
We had that at my first station. Guy who was once a full-time employee left radio full-time and also started a ministry that had him doing a combo of Christian music, preaching, prayer and whatever else. It ran 9-10:35 at which time he ran the board for ABC's "Issues and Answers" and an hour of the regular A/C formatOn small AM stations I've heard of a priest or minister doing a religious program on weekends, and then afterwards acting as a normal DJ on the station, playing secular pop music.
And when 1430 WNSW in Newark, NJ had an Adult Standards music format from 1999 to 2001, they had Jewish programming in the evenings. Today they are a full-time Catholic station, carrying "Relevant Radio".
WERE's founding owner (and former Cleveland mayor) Ray T. Miller was a practicing Catholic, which is most likely how it wound up on the station.When I was a kid, WERE aired the rosary every evening. And they were not a religious station.
Now WERE airs some brokered religion shows and the syndicated Rev. Al Sharpton, which is repeated too often every day.WERE's founding owner (and former Cleveland mayor) Ray T. Miller was a practicing Catholic, which is most likely how it wound up on the station.
That is true. Mr. Miller live down the block from me on Wellington in Cleveland Heights, and occasionally I subbed for a friend who delivered the Plain Dealer and several times I met him when doing collections.WERE's founding owner (and former Cleveland mayor) Ray T. Miller was a practicing Catholic, which is most likely how it wound up on the station.
To be fair, he did own WLEC in Sandusky and KFAC in Los Angeles and tried to get a construction permit for channel 19 (the second of three failed attempts between 1953 and 1978) so his priorities were likely elsewhere.That is true. Mr. Miller live down the block from me on Wellington in Cleveland Heights, and occasionally I subbed for a friend who delivered the Plain Dealer and several times I met him when doing collections.
On one occasion, I mentioned that I part-timed at WCUY and WJMO, but he did not seem interested in making conversation with a 13-year-old. Of course, by then WERE was being slaughtered by WHK so he had more on his mind than the brat who threw his paper into the shrubs sometimes.
Not a peep in the recently published and delivered newsletter.Has there been any update on the transmitter site work? Reception quality is still pretty much about the same as it's been.
So many Cleveland AM stations don't even cover Cuyahoga County. If they are not allowed to increase their power, then they should probably shut down and sell their property.Maybe the best update plan would be to turn in the license.
Remember, nearly all the significant stations in Cleveland (850, 1100, 1220, 1260, 1300, 1420, 1490) were licensed, if not in the 30's, in the late 40's to very early 50s, when the urban area did not extend beyond University Heights to the East and Garfield Heights to the South and Rocky River to the West.So many Cleveland AM stations don't even cover Cuyahoga County. If they are not allowed to increase their power, then they should probably shut down and sell their property.
Why? The station covers the city of licence just fine. It could be made to sound a little better and louder, though, compared to the station just to the right of it on the dial (WJMO 1300).Maybe the best update plan would be to turn in the license.
Now WERE 1490 is 800 day and 1,000 night. Covers everything from the east side and all the way down into Independence and Parma. I'm surprised at how much that thing blasts.Remember, nearly all the significant stations in Cleveland (850, 1100, 1220, 1260, 1300, 1420, 1490) were licensed, if not in the 30's, in the late 40's to very early 50s, when the urban area did not extend beyond University Heights to the East and Garfield Heights to the South and Rocky River to the West.
1490 only served the Eastern part of Cleveland and the Heights, as it was originally just 250 watts.
None of the stations can improve beyond current values. The last one to upgrade significantly was 850, and still it is restricted at night to the East (Boston and others) and severely to the West (Denver).
Unfortunately, the city of license is only about 1/3 the size it was in the 1950s.Why? The station covers the city of licence just fine. It could be made to sound a little better and louder, though, compared to the station just to the right of it on the dial (WJMO 1300).
It's still better than 50 killerwatt WHKW 1220, which I find perplexing.
A shame that the legendary WERE call letters have been moved to a station with such s puny signal.Now WERE 1490 is 800 day and 1,000 night. Covers everything from the east side and all the way down into Independence and Parma. I'm surprised at how much that thing blasts.
Maybe the best update plan would be to turn in the license.So many Cleveland AM stations don't even cover Cuyahoga County. If they are not allowed to increase their power, then they should probably shut down and sell their property.