WDGY has a great brand. They are one of the few in our market who still show up at events with merch. They also promote the AM station alongside the translators. There was this one promo, something to the effect of: "In your home on your smart speaker, and in your classic car on the AM dial." I think that's really smart. They have a market niche, and they run with it.Yes, I heard the same thing. I live in Minnetonka. I also noticed that the AM signal was sort of in and out for a few seconds every couple of minutes. It made my wife crazy so she forced me to turn it off. I wish the Borgen family could buy a 24 hours AM signal in the area for WDGY. I don't know if Salem is selling any of their frequencies - but I sure would like to see 980 as WDGY.
That said - I mostly listen on KTMY HD2, and so do most people I know who like the station.
980 really is a great frequency in the Twin Cities. It would be epic if "The Twin Cities Christian Voice" flipped to "The Original Rock n' Roll Station." Sadly, I don't see Salem selling anything in our market anytime soon. Salem has a tower array in St. Louis Park that I believe they are not using, too.
WHA Madison at night sounds nearly perfect inside their signal contour. Too bad the broadcast power barely reaches beyond the city limits. At this point, these stations will prioritize their FM translators and let their AM stations rest in peace.As David says, the NARBA pact and other subsequent agreements weren't perfect. As with all human endeavors, there was politics involved. Some owners had better lawyers or elected officials who could influence the outcome. (Apparently nobody was making a case for WHA Madison, WEW St. Louis, WDZ Decatur and KUOM Minneapolis--originally WLB, some of the oldest stations on the dial that remain days-only or with minimal nighttime power.)

