No, they actually would not. Country is a format targeted at the suburbs. With the exception of some of the Long Island end of the market, Nash is actually much better where it is.seems Cumulus would rather air NASH on 99.5 if it could.
Sure everyone would love to own an NYC Empire B. But given 2 of the 3 big players are maxed out in the NY market and the price/value and cost acquisition of the station, the list is likely pretty small. Beyond the purchase cost, operating a single station, from Empire no less, and without a cluster becomes even more expensive.Or, would it keep NASH on 94.7 & air another
format on 99.5? But----there would probably be no shortage of bidders for 99.5 if it becomes available.
Have you read anything on the board lately?Has 99.5 survived its current financial crisis ?
Right on, Dan. And, of course, Cumulus picked the correct format for that signal. 1) Country has no other major competitor in the New York market. 2) Most of the listening for country music would be in the burbs and not the city, making this signal fine for the format.
I agree that covering nearby NJ as well as possible is very important for Nash, and that the current signal does this well.
Perhaps it may be worthwhile for Cumulus to try and buy WLIX-LP 94.7, located in Ridge NY (in Suffolk County), and use it to simulcast Nash.
... except that Nash has an inferior signal in the eastern and northern suburbs.
The Cumulus deal with Family specified that an add-on to the purchase price would be paid if the facility moved to a site with better market coverage. That would indicate that both buyer and seller were aware of the desirability of improving the facility. And that is part of the reason why a number of posters have speculated that Cumulus might give $10 million and the Nash facility to Pacifica in exchange for the ESB licensed one.
It may have a weaker signal by air, but by book it's doing fine. If the facility was upgraded or changed frequency, would a half point gain in eastern end ratings, plus the rebuilding/migration of the audience be worth the $10m+ vs. where they are? Probably not..
then----- 94.7 likely has no plan to move its antennna from NJ to Empire state buiilding?
Cumulus boasts ------we have brought country back to NYC radio. But their target is central & north jersey.
I guess they consider any listeners in NYC an added bonus.
WNSH targets the New York City Metro Survey Area. Essentially all of their 65 dbu signal falls in the NY radio ratings metro, and nearly none of it in the NW NJ or Central NJ areas.
"Central NJ" (Middlesex, Somerset, & Union Counties) is actually in northern NJ geographically, and is well within WNSH's coverage contour.
To most media people, the Trenton (WKXW, WPST, etc) market is "Central New Jersey". The counties you mention are part of the NYC MSA.