Posted on 03/15/2012 11:39:16 PM PDT by raccoonradio
It's no April fool joke...starting April first, you'll be able to hear newstalk 1190 WOWO on the FM dial. WOWO programming will be simulcast on 92.3 FM. Programs like Fort Wayne's morning news, The Pat Miller Program and Rush Limbaugh will all be available to you on the FM dial. WOWO will continue to be available at 1190AM.
FEDERATED MEDIA today announced a new milestone in the history of Heritage News Talk Radio Station 1190AM WOWO in Fort Wayne, IN. Beginning in April 2012, Fort Waynes most listened to radio station will become available on FM at 92.3. This will be a full simulcast carrying the entire programming line up currently heard at 1190AM.
Federated Chief Operating Officer, Mark Deprez stated The move to FM is a natural enhancement for the WOWO brand that is synonymous with Fort Wayne. WOWO is, and has always been, the one radio outlet that northeast Indiana can count on for breaking news, weather, traffic, information. WOWOs strong service commitment to our community, along with the entertaining and engaging personalities, has solidified WOWO in the hearts of many of our local residents. The move to 92.3 FM will re-introduce WOWO to listeners that have migrated over the years to FM and also open WOWOs brand to new and younger audience.
Since 1925 in its humble beginnings atop the Main Street Auto building in downtown Fort Wayne, 1190 WOWO has been a beacon for our community. From its mighty 50,000 transmitter at 1190AM, people in northeast Indiana, along with the entire eastern seaboard have experienced the news of war, the dawn of Rock and Roll, the end of oppression and sound of victory! Federated Media looks forward to this new chapter in this storied radio stations history that is uniquely WOWO!
Having worked at a daytimer long ago, it was always an experience to dump the transmitter, by remote control from the studio, at sundown. I’d usually have the studio monitor speaker/amp fed from our modulation monitor, so one or more distant full-timers on our frequency would come in.
It surprised me that the modulation monitor-outdoor antenna combination was so sensitive, because the transmitter was only about two miles from our studio, and you could have picked it up on a piece of rock salt.
Usually more than one station would come in, so you’d get a slow beat between their carriers, causing them to swoosh in and out. Because the audio was coming from a wideband detector, you’d also hear the 10 KC heterodynes from adjacent channels still on the air (back then I could actually hear 10 KC!), and some nice static from powerlines and whatever thunderstorms might be within a hundred miles or more.
It was kind of spooky, like listening to the cosmos.
I used to work (for free) at a small AM near Boston and I’d shut off at 1 am or so. The other stations at 1570
(Montreal, NY state etc.) would then boom in over the
monitor. (This wasn’t a daytimer—maybe 85 watts at night—though, but it was a “turn off” moment)
In Boston it was necessary to start simulcasting WEEI 850
(Red Sox, Celtics, sports talk) over WMKK (now WEEI-FM) 93.7...not only was night recep in some areas iffy, but
rival CBS started an FM sports talker (WBZ-FM 98.5; talk,
Patriots, Bruins) which soon started to beat them in the
ratings. (Entercom owns WEEI and could have flipped the switch on the simulcast a couple yrs ago but was doing well
with jockless “variety hits”. Finally, they HAD to simulcast the sports talker.)
Now as far as they’re concerned, the FM is the main station
and the AM exists to fill in certain spots where the _FM_
is weak. “You’re next on 93.7, WEEI”. Same thing happened in Philly and other cities—simulcasts of AM on FM, or
moves.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.