KBIG Has is biggest lead and best number years
Here r top 5
KBIG 5.9
KIIS 5.4
KAMP 4.5
KOST 4.4
And....KPWR 4.0
Here r top 5
KBIG 5.9
KIIS 5.4
KAMP 4.5
KOST 4.4
And....KPWR 4.0
In Riverside-San Bernardino, the audience share of KOLA, which in March dropped the 1960s music and went to a 1970s-80s-90s classic hits format, dropped from 6.6 to 5.8. The 12% drop put Spanish-language KLYY in the top spot. Are listeners finally deciding that the 1990s hits aren't as appealing and enduring as the 1960s hits...or is the ratings drop what David would call an "aberration"?
KOLA is simply moving around within the range we often see in markets with small numbers of meters. KOLA has been anywhere from 7th to 2nd in 25-54 so far this year.
We have seen KFRG up by about a point from recent levels, and KOLA off a bit. KLYY is off a bit from levels set earlier in the year.
It's just wobble, not an aberration.
Is the KFI drop part of the Dickey identified trend of a weakening talk radio market (because of the Limbaugh-Fluke fuss) or other factors? End of election cycle, improving economy, demographic changes???
David can probably answer this: Did the ratings of San Francisco's KCBS-740 go up after the station starting simulcasting on 106.9? And, considering the 50,000-watt signal of AM 640, would KFI pick up any additional listeners with an FM simulcast?
KCBS went up I think, but how much it had to do with the FM I am not sure. The KXNT talk station in Vegas did not do much when it added an FM channel, but the FM signal is limited as their AM signal is somewhat.