WBMJ
City of license | San Juan, Puerto Rico |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Puerto Rico |
Frequency | 1190 kHz |
Format | Religious |
Power |
10,000 watts day 5,000 watts night |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 8440 |
Transmitter coordinates | 18°21′0″N 66°6′50″W / 18.35000°N 66.11389°WCoordinates: 18°21′0″N 66°6′50″W / 18.35000°N 66.11389°W |
Callsign meaning | We Broadcast the Message of Jesus |
Affiliations | Salem Communications |
Owner | Calvary Evangelistic Mission, Inc. |
Website | therockradio.org |
WBMJ (1190 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Religious format. Licensed to San Juan, Puerto Rico, USA, it serves the Puerto Rico area. The station is currently owned by Calvary Evangelistic Mission, Inc. and features programing from Salem Communications.
WBMJ is one of three AM stations that comprise The Rock Radio Network. The station's studio facilities are in Santurce, Puerto Rico. The facilities serve as the hub of the Network, and most of the Networks's programming originates from there. The transmitter is in Barrio Camarones, in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. It is operated with a 10,000-watt Nautel transmitter and broadcasts in a directional pattern. For more information on WBMJ, see The Rock Radio Network.
WBMJ broadcasts in a Religious format. Its programming is bilingual and consists largely of biblical teaching in English and in Spanish. WBMJ also broadcasts a limited amount of Christian music. It serves as the Puerto Rico affiliate of the Salem Radio Network News agency. WBMJ is also the site of the Bible Correspondence School of the Caribbean.
Early history
WBMJ was owned by Bob Hope’s Mid-Ocean Broadcasting Company, and set up by its excellent General Manager, the late Bob Bennett in 1967-1968. With its distinctive sound and top modulation the station was frequently picked up as far away as Norway. WBMJ signed on in 1968 under Bob Bennett, who continued to manage the station through 1980 when Bob Hope's Mid Ocean sold to record impresario Jerry Masucci.
Bob Bennett was a veteran of US Top 40 radio when he moved to Puerto Rico and started building WBMJ. The station was simply another iteration of the proven Top 40 format from the mainland. Since the Island of Puerto Rico is a US territory, it was natural to use mainland announcers and jingles and, of course, follow religiously the Billboard record charts. Since the culture shock of living in the Island was hard on the jocks, they seldom lasted more than a year. On the other hand, there were several totally bilingual Puerto Rican jocks who were there for a lengthy period, speaking English on a station in Puerto Rico.
From 1968 to roughly 1975, WBMJ was an exclusively English language Top 40 station, with all announcing and music in English. Spots were mostly in Spanish, though. The reasoning for the format was simple: all through Latin America, American music was popular. A really tightly done Top 40 with US hits would be an attractive proposition. However, all advertising in Puerto Rico tended to be in Spanish, so the spots were in Spanish. Even in 1968, there were less than 100,000 "Continentals" living in the Island; everyone else was a Spanish speaker first... Many knew English, though. The station, however, never got into the top stations in ratings, usually registering around 7th or 8th.
In 1975, WBMJ switched to Spanish jocks and a mix of 90% English music with some Spanish pop hits, under the name of Radio Rock. Radio Rock became the number one radio station in San Juan very quickly, staying there through much of the rest of the '70s, challenged seriously only by WKAQ with its Spanish Top 40. WBMJ became a salsa oldies station around 1981 as Exitos 1190 and then, eventually, became religious under the ownership of the operators of WIVV from Puerto Rico's Vieques Island.
External links
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WBMJ
- Radio-Locator Information on WBMJ
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WBMJ
- Personal accounts of former WBMJ jocks
- Listen to 4 of WBMJ's jingles included in the PAMS ”Series 18” ”Sonosational” jingles.