HHH said:The most charming and fascinating is the 12-minute segment about all those local commercials (again, mostly on WEVD), which supported these stations. As the host says "it is a window to a lost world"
http://yiddishradioproject.org/exhibits/commercials/
Wonderful! WEVD came in so poorly in the northwest Bronx that I never had the pleasure of hearing this stuff live, but no matter, voices from my childhood--even though I did not hear them back then.
Also, somewhere in the linked material is a mention of WEVD announcer Dick Suger. Despite the lousy signal, I used to listen to his Latin music show, which aired on WEVD Mondays from 5:00PM to 6:00PM. Tuesday thru Friday evenings, WEVD would sign off at 5:00PM to make way for WBBR (no relation to today's WBBR), but WHAZ in Troy had Monday evenings after 6:00PM, so WEVD would stay on an extra hour. Suger ended every show by wishing his listeners (in Spanish), "health and wealth and time to enjoy them." Just about the only Spanish I ever learned.