City | Trenton, New Jersey |
---|---|
Broadcast area |
Trenton, New Jersey Bucks County, Pennsylvania |
Branding | 920 The Jersey |
Frequency | 920 kHz |
First air date | 1942 |
Format | Sports |
Power | 1,400 watts (day) 1,000 watts (night) |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 25011 |
Former callsigns | WTTM (1942-1998) WCHR (1998-2002) WPHY (2002-2008) WNJE (1/2008-2/2008) WCHR (2008-2013) |
Owner |
Connoisseur Media (Connoisseur Media Licenses, LLC) |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | 920thejersey.com |
WNJE (920 AM) is a sports talk radio station in Trenton, New Jersey. The station is owned by Connoisseur Media, through Connoisseur Media Licenses, LLC.
This station first operated as WTTM in the early 1940s. It was affiliated with NBC in its early years, eventually shifting to the Mutual Broadcasting System. The station carried varied programming for many years, typically airing general popular music during weekday daytime hours, with Top 40 or rhythm and blues on weeknights and blocks of ethnic programming on weekends. The basic format changed to Top 40 in the late 1970s, followed by country for much of the 1980s and talk in the 1990s.
The WCHR call letters and religious format originated on WTTM's sister station at 94.5 FM in 1965 and remained there for over 30 years. After Nassau Broadcasting Partners acquired WCHR, it decided that the powerful FM station had more profit potential as a secular broadcaster, and moved the WCHR call sign and programming to the former WTTM on 920 AM. The switch began with a period of simulcasting that started in November 1997; by the end of February 1998 WCHR was heard on AM only.
The WTTM call sign was subsequently used on a co-owned expanded band AM station licensed to Princeton, which broadcast a sports format with programming from ESPN Radio. In September 2002 the "new" WTTM switched to an Asian format, the WCHR programming and call sign moved to 1040 AM in Flemington, New Jersey and the ESPN programming moved to 920, which adopted the call letters WPHY. Network programming on "920 ESPN" was supplemented with local shows targeting the Philadelphia market, such as Philly Sports Live hosted by Dan Schwartzman and the Reggie Brown (NFL wide receiver) Show. The station carried play-by-play of the Philadelphia Phillies and some Philadelphia college teams. However, WPHY's signal was inferior in much of the Philadelphia market, limiting the station's impact.