Not sure it’s a crime, but it definitely is one of very few violations which will practically guarantee a licensee receiving an invitation to a license revocation hearing.Is making false statements to the FCC a crime? Just asking.
Not sure it’s a crime, but it definitely is one of very few violations which will practically guarantee a licensee receiving an invitation to a license revocation hearing.Is making false statements to the FCC a crime? Just asking.
When signing the request for the STA extension, the authorized representative (Mr. Chang) is accepting this language (emphasis in CAPITAL LETTERS is the FCC’s, not mine):Is making false statements to the FCC a crime? Just asking

LOL. This church literally just lit $77,000 on fire! Good stuff.Bumping up with a recent development from Lance, via RadioInsight:
Omega Vision is a church based in Coral Springs, FL. They apparently operate a station there, WOIB-LP (101.9 FM) and they stream on YouTube.
So Chang is the big winner, making a $57,000 profit for doing next to nothing. Meanwhile, another signal gets taken over by a wanna-be, out-of-state godcaster.
Whenever I drove past the alleged antenna location, all I heard was a silent carrier and static. It is a stone's throw away from the Metro-North New Haven line tracks.I would be surprised if Chang made much profit off WVOX. The costs of all the FCC filings and setting up the STA facility (if it was ever really on the air; I never heard it) would probably have eaten up most of it.
Whenever I drove past the alleged antenna location, all I heard was a silent carrier and static. It is a stone's throw away from the Metro-North New Haven line tracks.
I realize that. It must have been some other kind of interference that I refer to as static. But I get your point.you cant hear a silent carrier if all you hear is static.. a silent carrier means the transmitters on with no audio, static means its off.
Their home church is in Florida. They stream their services and other stuff on YouTube.A couple things. The Organization buying the station appears (from the filings) to be based in the Bronx, on Gunhill Road, not in Florida. Also, this new group is going to have the same problem Jeff had, where to find a new transmitter site or Tower in Westchester to transmit from. I guess they could also locate in the north Bronx, and put a signal over New Rochelle from there, but dealing with the NYC government/bureaucracy to put up a new Tower, that won't be fun. I don't know if there is an existing AM tower available in the Bronx to possibly diplex on.
Bill O'Shaughnessy passed in May 2022.WVOX keeps bringing new meaning to 'Location, location, location.'
The facility was headed by William O'Shaughnessy for well over 50 years. WVOX was an accredited voice and comfortable success despite being just a 500-watt daytimer at the crammed upper part of the dial. It managed to span the era from when one-station towns meant solid local service to when FM and other leisure pursuits began siphoning off features from even some bigger AM regionals. Coming to mind in the small-business/town crier success genre were daytime DX catches WTMR Camden, WSTC Stamford, WNAR 1110 Norristown and without s doubt a few that the older DXers in other parts of the country each could list.
One exclusive fact of physics kept WVOX in restraints all those years: Location.
I can't, in my DX memory, think of another AM station located as near the city limits of a major market (and the #1 market in the country, besides) which had to have just trace listenship in so few places. Even with it's signal nestled more than comfortably from interference in the null of NYC's WHOM 1480, I doubt that anyone in Yonkers -- NY State's 3rd most populous city -- had any use for WVOX. Even fewer devotees would be listening in the Bronx where the signal was equally loud and clear. The huge omni signal over a few miles of water to the wealthy northern Nassau County's estates would also have meant no listeners or advertisers. Densely populated northern Queens? Same thing. Farther north there was full-service -- and full-time -- WFAS White Plains serving its slice of Westchester County's 900,000 customers. WVOX reached shore line shires in Connecticut very well, and even the most populous parts of Rockland County and no one there could possibly care.
It's amazing that a tiny 500-watt daytimer could more than hold its own for so long and win respectable awards in emphasizing just three cities in its coverage area. But that feat was more than accomplished.
O'Shaughnnesy has been gone for a decade now. There has to be rolled eyes at any new owner envisioning anything resembling actual listener acclaim in 2025. Expect it to become just another extension speaker for some distant religion outfit. At best.
How does this differ from WGBB in Nassau County, or a handful of little signals in the far west part of Suffolk (like WGSM, WGLI, WBAB, all AM). Crappy little signals that reach a fraction of the market. The answer is they each identified some niche within their signal's footprint and superserved it, then sold ads to companies or retailers that wanted to reach that niche. In a market like NYC, even a small niche can translate to a lot of ears and a mini-ecosystem that kept them alive. But that was then, when AM was the main game in town, and this is now, when there's FM and 10,000 streamers, and AM is just an ancient, noisy, obsolete also-ran.So have at it.
The main idea? It was amazement that WVOX had been a station virtually within walking distance to a boundary line and covering some two million NYC people, plus other places it chose not to service. And in its heyday it was even leaving the air at sunset each day after predominantly being the voice of just three cities. Much like Long Island's directional 10,000-watt daytimer WHLI, which showed in the ratings of a half dozen markets, WVOX did not need or use all the extra coverage provided by its proximity to big population districts due to its *location*.
I was marveling at the achievements of a 500-watt station that, essentially used only part of its signal and coverage.
At the same time I was lamenting that, despite all that history, focus and credibility having extended even into prohibitive times everywhere else, it doesn't matter what it becomes now.