This article needs additional citations for verification .(December 2008) |
| |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Sussex County, New Jersey Skylands |
Frequency | 1360 kHz |
Programming | |
Format | Spanish Christian |
Ownership | |
Owner | Centro Biblico of NJ, Inc. |
History | |
First air date | 1953 |
Former call signs | WNNJ (1953–2008) |
Call sign meaning | True Oldies Channel (former format) |
Technical information [1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 25414 |
Class | B |
Power |
|
Translator(s) | 95.9 W240EE (Dover) |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
WTOC (1360 AM) is a radio station licensed to Newton, New Jersey. Owned by Centro Biblico of NJ, Inc. with a Spanish-language Christian format. Until August 17, 2011, they aired an oldies music format with songs from the 1960s and 1970s along with a small number of oldies from 1955 to 1964 and a small number of hits from the 1980s, a full-time affiliate of Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel from ABC Radio. [2] The station was owned by Clear Channel Communications from 2001 until 2011. From the station's 1953 sign-on until July 1, 2008, the radio station was known as WNNJ. [3]
The station was known as WNNJ when it signed on as a daytimer in 1953 and had a full service middle of the road music and news format. The station was owned by Simpson Wolfe, incorporated as Sussex County Broadcasters. In 1961, Wolfe got the construction permit for 103.7 FM. That Station, WNNJ-FM signed on in 1962 and broke away as WIXL in the mid-1960s. By 1971, 1360 WNNJ would evolve into an adult contemporary music format with a slight lean on Top 40 music. The station was also news intensive. WNNJ was also allowed to sign on at 6:00 a.m. even if it stayed dark after because they had a pre sunrise authorization. In the Fall of 1978, WNNJ modified their music to more of a Top 40 format adding more rock music.
In 1979, Group M Communications headed by Marvin Strauzer & Mike Levine purchased WNNJ and WIXL. WNNJ stayed with top 40 until October 1981, when they evolved back into an Adult Contemporary format and in November 1981 into Adult Standards format, mixing in some Adult Contemporary hits. The amounts of adult contemporary hits varied from more than half to only a couple an hour depending upon the time of day and who was on the air. The station tried to be more consistent by the early summer playing very limited contemporary songs but by the late summer the station began to lean Adult Contemporary again. In the Fall of 1982 though the station abruptly dropped the baby boomer pop and became a Big Band and Standards station only playing music from the '30s to the '50s, with a few exceptions by Sinatra-type artists. By the Spring of 1983 the station evolved back to a Middle Of The Road format blending standards and soft AC cuts.
That fall, the station moved into an easy listening leaning format playing almost no big bands but only small amounts of adult contemporary cuts. The station was now leaning toward artists like Frank Sinatra, Nat "King" Cole, Nancy Wilson, Johnny Mathis, among others. This format failed, and on February 8, 1984, at 1:00 p.m. WNNJ became a soft adult Contemporary station. At that point WNNJ got a post sunset authorization to stay on the air until 6 p.m. even in the months that dusk occurred before 6. That summer they modified into more of a contemporary hit radio station mixing in a few oldies. In the Winter of 1985, under new program director William Cox, and after a few false starts, WNNJ settled on an Adult Contemporary/Oldies hybrid format under the name "Solid Gold 1360 WNNJ". The format did well through the late 1980s. In 1989 WNNJ got 24-hour-a-day authorization to broadcast. WNNJ now could stay on the air during the overnight but still signed off at 10:00 p.m.
By 1990, though the current product was dropped and the station had evolved into a broad based 1955-1989 oldies format still known as Solid Gold 1360 WNNJ. In January 1994, some of the full-time airstaff was laid off while other full timers and part timers were folded into 103.7 WNNJ-FM. WNNJ 1360 became a satellite oldies station playing music from 1955 to 1975. The station was still called Solid Gold 1360 WNNJ but was entirely automated. The station also began broadcasting 24 hours a day.
Late in 1996, Nassau Broadcasting purchased WNNJ along with WNNJ-FM. WNNJ 1360 dropped the Satellite Oldies in favor of ABC's Stardust satellite format featuring an eclectic blend of standards, soft rock oldies, soft AC cuts, and some big bands. The station remained automated full-time, known as "Unforgettable 1360 WNNJ".
During the summer of 1998 WNNJ added a live weekday morning show from 5:30 to 10 a.m. with Chris Debello. The show consisted of a few adult standard songs along with news and listener phone calls. In 2000 the satellite format was switched to Westwood One's standards format which was a blend of soft rock oldies, easy listening standards, and soft adult contemporary hits. By now the station was known as simply "1360 WNNJ".
In January of 2001, WNNJ AM, WNNJ FM and WSUS were sold to Clear Channel Communications, along with the LMA Nassau had with WDLC and WTSX. The station stayed with this standards format for about a year and 8 months but advertising was very low. At 3 p.m. on November 27, 2002, WNNJ switched to country as "Bear Country 1360". The station was entirely automated with in house voicetracking except for overnights when they ran "After Midnight". Ratings were still very low but the format lasted until September 2004.
In September 2004 Clear Channel lost the local marketing agreement with locally owned 96.7 WTSX (known as Fox 96.7) which played '60s' and '70s' oldies. At the end of the month WTSX went their separate way. Most of the airstaff though would stay with Clear Channel. They opted to move aspects of the Oldies format over to 1360, dropping country and flipping to oldies as "Oldies 1360". In the Spring of 2005 Oldies 1360 added former WCBS-FM personality Max Kinkel to mornings. Late in October 2006, Max Kinkle suffered debilitating injuries in an automobile accident. He never returned to the station.
On July 30, 2007, local voice tracking and personalities were abruptly dropped. The station continued its automated oldies format for a few more weeks. Then on August 21 at Noon, WNNJ picked up a Satellite format called "Timeless Classics", which played a mix or Soft Oldies, some Soft AC cuts, and some adult standards. Core artists included Beatles, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Neil Diamond, Ray Charles, Billy Joel, Roy Orbison, and others.
On June 26, 2008, it was announced that WNNJ was dropping their call letters on July 1, 2008, and would be known as "WTOC" at that time. On the evening of June 30, 2008, the Classic AC/Oldies Timeless format was dropped in favor of Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel. WTOC shares its call letters with a CBS television affiliate in Savannah, Georgia, known as WTOC-TV; the two stations are not affiliated.
On July 21, 2010, Clear Channel announced that they will donate the station to the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council through the MMTC-CLEAR CHANNEL Ownership Diversity Initiative. According to press releases at the time, originally, Clear Channel would continue to manage the station with an LMA and WTOC would continue to offer True Oldies Channel. At the same time it was stated that Minority Media also had the option of selling the station and they executed that option in August 2011 selling the station to Radio Christiana. The station then signed off at noon on August 17, 2011. The last song played was "Hello Goodbye" by the Beatles. The last voice heard was that of chief engineer for Clear Channel Sussex and staff announcer Tony Dee. On December 19, 2011, WTOC signed back on with a Spanish-language Christian format under ownership of Radio Vision Christiana.
In September 2013, WTOC was sold by Radio Vision Christiana to Centro Biblico of NJ, Inc. for $235,000. The sale was consummated on September 23, 2013.
KIXI is a radio station licensed to Mercer Island/Seattle, Washington. It operates 24 hours a day with a daytime power of 50,000 watts and a nighttime power of 10,000 watts from a transmitter in Mercer Slough Nature Park in Bellevue, where studios are also located.
WODE-FM is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Easton, Pennsylvania. The station's service contour covers the Lehigh Valley area of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
Adult hits is a radio format drawing from popular music from the late 1960s to the present. The format typically focuses on classic hits, but blended with adult contemporary, pop, and rock hits from the 1970s through at least the 1990s, and is synonymous with franchised brands such as Jack FM and Bob FM.
WVPO is an FM radio station in Lehman Township, Pennsylvania known as "Bigfoot Country 96.7 & 97.3". The station is owned by Seven Mountains Media, programming a country music format.
WTRY-FM, is a commercial radio station licensed to Rotterdam, New York. It airs a classic hits format. WTRY-FM serves the New York State Capital District in the Albany-Schenectady-Troy radio market. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, and broadcasts at 6,000 watts ERP from a tower in between Altamont and Duanesburg off U.S. Route 20. Studios and offices are on Troy-Schenectady Road in Latham.
WNNJ is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Newton, New Jersey and serving Sussex County. It airs a classic rock radio format focusing on the 1970s, 80s and 90s, and is owned by iHeartMedia The station is known as "103-7 NNJ The Tri States' Rock Station". Several of the personalities on WNNJ are voicetracked from WAXQ New York City and WXTB Tampa. The studios and offices are on Mitchell Avenue in Franklin, New Jersey.
WSUS is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Franklin, New Jersey, and serving the Sussex County area of North Jersey. It is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc., and has an adult contemporary radio format, switching to Christmas music for much of November and December. The station is consistently the number one radio station in Sussex County. It carries the syndicated Delilah call-in and request show on weeknights, Ellen K on Saturday mornings and classic American Top 40 with Casey Kasem shows on Sunday mornings.
WHCY, known as 106.3 The Bear, is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Blairstown, New Jersey and serving the Sussex, Warren, and Morris County areas of North Jersey plus East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. It airs a country music radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. WHCY carries syndicated programs from co-owned Premiere Networks including The Bobby Bones Show in morning drive time and After Midnight with Granger Smith overnight.
WDUV is a commercial radio station licensed to New Port Richey, Florida and serving the Tampa Bay Area. Owned by Cox Radio, it broadcasts a soft adult contemporary format. It switches to all-Christmas music for much of November and December. WDUV's studios and offices are in St. Petersburg. The transmitter site is off Dartmouth Drive in Holiday.
Adult standards is a North American radio format heard primarily on AM or class A FM stations.
WLEV is a commercial radio station licensed to serve Allentown, Pennsylvania. The station is owned by Cumulus Media, Inc, through licensee Radio License Holding CBC LLC, and broadcasts an adult contemporary music radio format.
WAEB is a news, talk, and sports AM radio station in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in the Lehigh Valley region of eastern Pennsylvania.
WUMR is a commercial Spanish contemporary hits FM radio station that is licensed to serve Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The WUMR studios are located in the neighboring community of Bala Cynwyd, while the station transmitter resides in nearby Wyndmoor.
WOLS is a Spanish-language FM radio station broadcasting at a frequency of 106.1 MHz serving the Charlotte, North Carolina market. Its programming consists of music and other material distributed by "La Raza," the Regional Mexican radio network.
WRWB-FM is a radio station licensed to Ellenville, New York, and serving an area including much of the Hudson Valley and the eastern parts of the Catskills. WRWB-FM is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and broadcasts with 115 watts effective radiated power from a tower site on Shawangunk Ridge in Ellenville. The high elevation of this tower site gives the station a fringe coverage area that stretches from the Berkshire Mountains in Massachusetts to the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania. Its studios are in Arlington, New York.
Nassau Broadcasting Partners LP was a company based in Princeton, New Jersey that owned radio stations in New England and the Mid-Atlantic United States. Nassau's stations, which included both AM and FM frequencies, were located in Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The company was owned and headed by Louis F. Mercatanti. Nassau was predominantly an operator of radio stations in medium and small markets. Nassau formerly owned radio station WCRB in Waltham, a Boston suburb, and located in the Boston market, the 11th largest radio market in the US, according to BIA Financial Network. However that station was sold to WGBH in 2009. Nassau operated radio stations in substantially all of the major formats. The company's most common format was classic rock/classic hits. On October 13, 2011 Nassau Broadcasting entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after their senior lenders petitioned for an involuntary Chapter 7 liquidation in September. The stations were auctioned to various bidders in May 2012 subject to bankruptcy judge and FCC approval. Nassau's last station, WPLY in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania, lost its license in 2014 after having shut down in 2011.
WSCC-FM, also known as "News Radio 94.3 WSC", is a commercial radio station licensed to Goose Creek, South Carolina, and serving the Charleston metropolitan area. It airs a news/talk format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The station's studios and offices are on Houston Northcutt Boulevard in Mount Pleasant.
WEST is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Easton, Pennsylvania, and serving the Lehigh Valley. It airs a rhythmic contemporary format, simulcast with AM 1600 WHOL. Both stations are owned by Lee L'Heureux, Patrick Cerullo, and Andrea Cerullo, through licensee Major Keystone LLC. Studios and offices are on Colorado Street in Allentown.
WHIT is a radio station based in Madison, Wisconsin and broadcasting a classic country format. The station is owned by Mid-West Family Broadcasting.
WLKD is a radio station in Minocqua, Wisconsin, United States. The station is owned by NRG Media through Raven License Sub, LLC.