For nearly all of the stations that RadioWorld reached out to, engineers described the audio as “excellent” and “fantastic,” with others describing the video crawl as “clear.”
In Philadelphia several stations had no problem getting the alert tones on the air but rather than air the “this is a test” message, the stations instead relayed an interview about a Sioux City, IA radio station that opted to go all-‘80s music—including a clip of A-ha’s hit “Take On Me”—that was airing on Philly’s “Local Primary” or LP-1 alert station WHYY (90.9). One of the several that aired it was AC “101.1 More FM” WBEB, where program director Chuck Knight says it lasted about a minute until his team hit the release button tones themselves.

Meanwhile, posts on social media websites also hinted at some minor problems in a few markets including St. Louis and San Antonio. Figuring out what went wrong will be the job of FEMA and the FCC in the coming months.
FEMA officials said at last week’s Radio Show they expected 4%-5% of stations would run into problems during Wednesday’s national test. But rather than point fingers, officials said the goal was to see where the weak links in the EAS chain remain.
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