“It’s the Torch Hour” or “It’s the Quiet Hour,” or he’d read a poem or some free verse essay like “How Do I Love You.” Brilliant radio. Some is on old LPs, and now on YouTube.What a magnificent voice he had.
“It’s the Torch Hour” or “It’s the Quiet Hour,” or he’d read a poem or some free verse essay like “How Do I Love You.” Brilliant radio. Some is on old LPs, and now on YouTube.What a magnificent voice he had.
He was truly unique.“It’s the Torch Hour” or “It’s the Quiet Hour,” or he’d read a poem or some free verse essay like “How Do I Love You.” Brilliant radio. Some is on old LPs, and now on YouTube.
I remember WOSU being a "limited time" station. signing off at Dallas sunset.Where I am in Reynoldsburg, Ohio, it's local WVSG, long known as WOSU, transmitting from a six-tower array on the southwest side of Columbus. Solid 6,500 watts daytime, a directional 790 at night tightly beaming to the northeast to protect WBAP.
If you're outside that directional pattern at night, even in the metro area, it's possible to hear WBAP with a turn of the radio. That's tougher for me given that I'm east-northeast of the tower farm, but I'm far enough away that WBAP can be audible underneath at times. Behind the pattern, I've heard WBAP within 10 miles of WVSG's towers. WVSG's signal goes pretty quickly within the deepest part of the null even within sight of the farm.
The same thing as the original WAIT in Chicago.I remember WOSU being a "limited time" station. signing off at Dallas sunset.
I remember WOSU being a "limited time" station. signing off at Dallas sunset.
Yes, WAIT got to stay on until Dallas sunset. By which time at my location you could hear WBAP clearly underneath it.The same thing as the original WAIT in Chicago.
The other side of that was when they signed on in the morning they couldn't come on until at least 30 minutes after the other local daytimers signed on.Yes, WAIT got to stay on until Dallas sunset. By which time at my location you could hear WBAP clearly underneath it.