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97.3 is going CHR

While sitting in Hoover traffic this morning, I tuned into 100.1 and heard a drop for a CHR-formatted 97.3 three times inside a half hour. The announcer said, "The new 97-3 Play, trending music."

Someone on here suggested that this would happen after digging through domain name registrations. Credit to that person for calling it several months ago.
 
As of 9 pm tonight, 100.1 is nothing but dead air. So, the next question is...will SummitMedia move WEZZ's soft AC format to 97.7, 100.1, or completely do away with it? I'm guessing the soft AC moves to 100.1 and "The Peach" stays where it is. Should that be the scenario that plays out (no pun intended), will the soft AC format be able to survive on the much weaker 100.1 signal?

The play973.com domain was registered Christmas Eve of last year, presumably by SummitMedia since the registration timestamp is identical to play1069.com (SummitMedia's Louisville, KY station). Their has been a parking page previously at play973.com, but tonight it has been replaced by a blank page..
 
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The other site is reporting that a three way change is coming to Birmingham. I wonder if 100.1 FM/1320 AM is getting a makeover too.

Dan <><
 
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Unfortunately, cannot access it because it is for "premium subscribers only". Could "three-way" imply 97.7 too since 1320/100.1 are actually simulcast together as one station? I wouldn't think "Peach" would be involved in any kind of format swap, but I suppose it depends on RI's definition of "three way change". Then again...there are other stations to consider, including 102.1 and 107.3.
 
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Please do not copy and paste anything which is for "premium subscribers only".
We really don't want to be sued.

Thanks for your understanding.

Frank
 
Please do not copy and paste anything which is for "premium subscribers only".
We really don't want to be sued.

Thanks for your understanding.

Frank

We're not posting the content of the article, just whatever is readily accessible from the RI website, which anyone can view.
 
I don't think any of us Alabama forum lurkers subscribe to the other site. Or if someone does, they aren't admitting it publicly. ;)

My feeling is that BMR and WAGG's FM counterparts are safe; this is going to be between 97.3, 1320/100.1, 97.7 and 99.1.

The 99.1 translator has been off the air for ages and I haven't heard anyone say if it ever came back on. IIRC, they lost the lease on the licensed site and had to file a CP for a new location with less power. The parent station has been WENN, but with 100.1 being tied to it, I have been wondering what Summit would do with 99.1.

WZZK quietly added HD with no subchannels a while back. I first learned about it when someone all the way up in Florence picked it up! WEZZ has room for one more, too.

Though I'm not usually one for rampant speculation, my feeling here is that 97.3 will change to CHR and the soft AC format will be bumped to 1320/100.1, and perhaps 99.1 will be paired up with an HD subchannel on WZZK in the future. It just seems to make sense. And if the WZZK/99.1 thing turns out to be classic country, that would be even more sensible. Which is probably why none of it will happen.
 
The application for 99.1 to remain off the air was accepted for filing but never granted. It may be a while before 99.1 returns. Classic country...I would LOVE to see that show up somewhere on Birmingham radio, although I have my doubts it ever will. :(
 
What are the chances that Easy and the WEZZ calls go to 97.7 FM?
What are the chances that the 1320 AM/100.1 FM relay do a Classic Hip-Hop format for the Magic City?

Dan <><
 
I say let 97.7 FM go back to the WEZZ calls and target the profitable Shelby Country area. That's where most, if not all, of Easy's audience resides anyway. Let the 100.1/1320 combo do the classic hip-hip thing for city itself.

Dan <><

P.S. I know this makes too much sense, Mr. Zach or anyone else reading. Hence the reason why it'll never happen.
 
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What are the chances that Easy and the WEZZ calls go to 97.7 FM?
What are the chances that the 1320 AM/100.1 FM relay do a Classic Hip-Hop format for the Magic City?

Dan <><

It's possible that "Easy's" format could get moved to 97.7, but for that to happen, SummitMedia would probably have to scrap "Peach" entirely to do so, if 97.3 does indeed go CHR as "Play". As far as classic hip hop on 1320/100.1, I can't see it happening. The market is already saturated with urban-formatted stations (WBHJ, WBHK, WUHT, 104.1 The Beat, and B106.5 on FM...and WATV and WJLD on AM), although the last two aren't big players in the grand scheme of things.
 
I say let 97.7 FM go back to the WEZZ calls and target the profitable Shelby Country area. That's where most, if not all, of Easy's audience resides anyway. Let the 100.1/1320 combo do the classic hip-hip thing for city itself.

Dan <><

P.S. I know this makes too much sense, Mr. Zach or anyone else reading. Hence the reason why it'll never happen.

I wouldn't say that most of Easy 97.3's listeners are in Shelby county necessarily. 97.7 does have a good signal over Shelby county, but listening to WHPH in parts of Jefferson County is more problematic. If Easy's soft AC format winds up getting shelved to 1320/100.1, listeners in Shelby county will have a much more difficult time in hearing the signal. One reason being, of course, is the much more limited signal of 100.1 as opposed to that of 97.3. Another thing to consider for listeners in south Shelby County...yesterday, I was up in Alabaster and tried listening to 100.1 in the car, and APH Radio (WZAL) on the adjacent channel of 99.9 totally obliterated any reception of 100.1. Granted, WZAL doesn't have a huge footprint for their signal, but it's enough to wipe out any signals on adjacent frequencies.
 
If Easy's soft AC format winds up getting shelved to 1320/100.1, listeners in Shelby county will have a much more difficult time in hearing the signal.

That's a fair point. If that is one of the big money areas they might want to reach, perhaps there is something else in the works. An earlier comment from you about 99.1 seems to put that translator out of play for now. I don't think they're going to flip any other full power stations other than 97.3 in the near future. So that leaves translators and AM/HD originators.

I took a look at the FCC 60 dBu contour maps for all of Summit's translators: 92.3, 99.1, 100.1, 102.1 106.3 and 107.3.

We can probably rule out the ones associated with WAY-FM — 92.3 and 106.3. Neither are full market signals, and there's probably some type of long term lease in effect with them. BMR? I could see that go either way. There's probably an agreement that prohibits them from getting bumped to a lesser signal, but if not it'd be fair game. I have a feeling BMR would do alright with a smaller signal, but maybe not. I dunno where their demo is in the metro.

That leaves 99.1, 100.1 and 102.1.

Of those three, 99.1's current CP has the biggest coverage area of all of the Summit translators, including the ones for WAY-FM and BMR. 102.1's current signal is a very, very close second, while 100.1's is the most severely hampered. Places like Pleasant Grove, Gardendale and Indian Springs Village are completely outside the 60 dBu line.

Would they really consider upending all of WAGG's FM listeners on 102.1 and shuffle them off to a lesser signal to give it up for Sleepy Soft AC? I keep hearing from "radio pros" that black formats are harder to sell than white or multi-ethnic formats like AC. But then I believe Birmingham has a very sizeable black middle class in the suburbs that 100.1 would not reach as well, which could only hurt their bottom line as everyone avoids music on AM like the plague.

This is why I keep wondering about 99.1's ultimate fate. If they could get it back on the air, Soft AC could go to that frequency and have a massive audience as far as the coverage maps go. 102.1 would be a nice consolation prize, at the loss of suburban black gospel listeners who'd be SOL with 100.1. Of course, those same listeners spent decades loyally listening to WAGG on 1320 and later on 610, which has a great signal day and night in the metro. So maybe they'll stick with the format no matter where it goes.

And here I said I hate to speculate. :rolleyes:

Ugh, and now I'm thinking they'd have to buy new URLs for three stations now, and change up all their Facebook pages (assuming WENN even has one, which I don't think it does.) It doesn't seem very sensible, but then I've never said radio companies always act sensibly.
 
That's a fair point. If that is one of the big money areas they might want to reach, perhaps there is something else in the works. An earlier comment from you about 99.1 seems to put that translator out of play for now. I don't think they're going to flip any other full power stations other than 97.3 in the near future. So that leaves translators and AM/HD originators.

I took a look at the FCC 60 dBu contour maps for all of Summit's translators: 92.3, 99.1, 100.1, 102.1 106.3 and 107.3.

We can probably rule out the ones associated with WAY-FM — 92.3 and 106.3. Neither are full market signals, and there's probably some type of long term lease in effect with them. BMR? I could see that go either way. There's probably an agreement that prohibits them from getting bumped to a lesser signal, but if not it'd be fair game. I have a feeling BMR would do alright with a smaller signal, but maybe not. I dunno where their demo is in the metro.

That leaves 99.1, 100.1 and 102.1.

Of those three, 99.1's current CP has the biggest coverage area of all of the Summit translators, including the ones for WAY-FM and BMR. 102.1's current signal is a very, very close second, while 100.1's is the most severely hampered. Places like Pleasant Grove, Gardendale and Indian Springs Village are completely outside the 60 dBu line.

Would they really consider upending all of WAGG's FM listeners on 102.1 and shuffle them off to a lesser signal to give it up for Sleepy Soft AC? I keep hearing from "radio pros" that black formats are harder to sell than white or multi-ethnic formats like AC. But then I believe Birmingham has a very sizeable black middle class in the suburbs that 100.1 would not reach as well, which could only hurt their bottom line as everyone avoids music on AM like the plague.

This is why I keep wondering about 99.1's ultimate fate. If they could get it back on the air, Soft AC could go to that frequency and have a massive audience as far as the coverage maps go. 102.1 would be a nice consolation prize, at the loss of suburban black gospel listeners who'd be SOL with 100.1. Of course, those same listeners spent decades loyally listening to WAGG on 1320 and later on 610, which has a great signal day and night in the metro. So maybe they'll stick with the format no matter where it goes.

And here I said I hate to speculate. :rolleyes:

Ugh, and now I'm thinking they'd have to buy new URLs for three stations now, and change up all their Facebook pages (assuming WENN even has one, which I don't think it does.) It doesn't seem very sensible, but then I've never said radio companies always act sensibly.

If SummitMedia's intentions are to move "Easy" to one of the their translators, it's not a good move IMO. Most of "Easy's" listeners during the day are in-office listeners. I imagine that any of the SummitMedia translators (99.1, 100.1, or 102.1) would have a difficult time in being able to penetrate office buildings, especially for those listeners close to our outside the 60 dBu contour. Those listeners outside the 60dBU coverage area would probably not be able to receive the station within an office building at all. Consider the following coverage areas of the three possible scenarios (99.1, 100.1, and 102.1):


W256CD (99.1): http://fccdata.org/?appid=1625397&facid=153894
W261BX (100.1): http://fccdata.org/?facid=&call=w261bx&ccode=1&city=&state=&country=US&arn=&party=&party_type=LICEN
W271BN: (102.1): http://fccdata.org/?facid=&call=w271bn&ccode=1&city=&state=&country=US&arn=&party=&party_type=LICEN


Just wondering what possible advantage it would be for SummitMedia to relegate "Easy" to one on their FM translators? This wouldn't be the first time they have shelved a station off of 97.3 to an FM translator (102.1, with "Y'all") and that didn't fare too well. Many listeners began to complain about the new signal on 102.1 FM once the move occurred. Listeners fell off...ratings declined...and it wasn't any time before SummitMedia pulled the plug on "Y'all" on 102.1 and left it on life support on 1320. Most listeners weren't aware that WENN was airing "Y'all" (and many of them wouldn't care to listen to the station just bc "it's AM radio"). "Y'all" was essentially phased out over time. Even though "Y'all" was actually a placeholder/long stunt on 97.3 until "Easy" could debut, could a move for "Easy" to an FM translator be merely a temporary situation as what occurred with "Y'all"?
 
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Guess we'll find out. Looks like they flipped formats about 20 minutes ago. My website is already updated with the details.

Here's what's happened so far: 97.3 has flipped to Hot AC or CHR as 97.3 Play. Soft AC has moved to 1320 and 102.1, while gospel is now on 610 and 100.1.

The websites don't appear to be up and running yet, but Facebook changes have already been made. The listen live stream on 97.3's old Easy website still works if anyone wants to take a gander at the new format.
 
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