Re: WSNJ-AM...a note of interest
And I remember back in the early '60s when Cumberland County was well served by the original WMVB-1440 AM 97.3 FM with local news every hour with two mobile news units, prowling Millville, Vineland, and Bridgeton --- and loads of local commercials and PSAs -- too many IMNSHO. He'll if you lost your dog or cat, they would PSA it..same for found animals; and nobody could even get away with running a red light without it going out on the radio. Long for those days of mom and pop radio stations. Even the old WWBZ-1360 Vineland, had local content though they were trying to be Wibbage Wannabees. And remember the old WSNJ-FM once running the QXR Network of classical music, picked up over the air using a big yagi stuck half way up the WSNJ tower, from the old WIFI 92.5 Phila, who in turn picked up the signal of a central Jersey FMer, in turn from WQXR itself -- before it started duplicating the 1240 fare.
Cumberland County is indeed fortunate in having one last vestage of local radio --- soemthing so common throughout the USA back then. Maybe they should put WSNJ on the Historic Register or something...imagine a teapot 1240 operation nowadays putting up a tower like that beauty at Carlls Corner and a building that size -- indeed a historic landmark. It's a shame though that the "repeater" at 1440 cant serve Millville as well as the old WMVB of the 1960s did with its news and beautiful music format or even it's pre Jan 1958 operation as WMLV -- which had time-block formats from country to easy listening to top 40 -- and even the classical "Sunset Serenade" in the summer.
> Although WSNJ misses many out-of-market listeners with the
> loss of 107.7 FM, 1240 AM is doing better than ever.
> Advertising is way up and 1240 still covers some
> out-of-market pockets in Delaware. (WSNJ 1240 and WMVB 1440
> are picked up on the Cape May - Lewes ferry).
>
> When Quinn Broadcasting took over WSNJ-AM two years ago,
> they decided to simulcast all WSNJ programming on their
> station WMVB 1440 which covers all of Cape May County as
> well as many parts of Atlantic County and the state of
> Delaware. With the addition of streaming on WSNJAM.com,
> they've gained listeners in Florida (Al Alberts & Stella),
> California (Dick Clark), New York (Cousin Brucie & Dan
> Ingram), Tennessee, Baltimore and Washington DC; also
> worldwide with listeners in Canada, England, Scotland, and
> Ireland. Listenership over WSNJ.com has required the
> addition of more lines to stream on for the increased
> demand. Other well-known listeners include Hy Lit, Bill
> Wright Sr, and Ed Hurst (who, incidentally, will be a guest
> on WSNJ’s Legends series on Tuesday, March 21).
>
> Quinn Broadcasting is considering adding an FM to complement
> the successful WSNJ AM.
>