Yeah. I don't know how much fun is involved. On this very message board I've already offered my thoughts about improvements. You, along with others here, apparently didn't see fit to acknowledge them.
Your suggestions are vague and unspecific; you offer nothing actionable and your posts are the cynical rants of a misanthrope.
Of course, the self-proclaimed "I-know-everything-already" crowd (or individual, as the case may be) certainly couldn't conceive that other's thought could ever warrant consideration. How many times have you pulled up to a light and heard anyone blasting content from WECK?
How many times do you hear the radio "blasting" from the car of any mature adult? Stoplights are not a ratings device.
Anyhow... First, were I ever to be the owner of WECK, it would have been a free & clear outright gift from someone that knows the underlying value of dirt.
How un-clever. Profitable radio stations are ulta-common. Most stations make money or provide an income for a sole proprietor. The value of a station is proportional to its cash flow or its potential. The owner of WECK, a very successful career broadcaster, obviously knows that he can make a profit doing what he is currently engaged in.
In any event, were Mr Shula to want feedback and suggestions, he'd likely find a way to assemble a "listeners club" or the like where he could bring a couple of pizzas and chat with users of his station about the programming. Fer shur he ain't gonna' be looking for guidance from you.
I would never invest in a troubled/dying outdated industry (fitting that it abuts a cemetery, no?) and/or a specific entity that shows absolutely no long term financial sustainability.
If that is the case, you likely will never buy a car; they have a finite life span, they break down and they are worth nearly nothing if you keep them a while.
Radio is viable for quite a few years to come. Like any depreciating asset, one tries to get a decent return on it during its lifetime so that the ROI makes up for the declining asset value; think of the comparison with oil wells that certainly applies here.
So, were I to have been gifted all of WECK, I'd capitalize on the asset.
What does that mean?
It'd be worth far more as things other than an AM radio station (with or without these translators)... especially from a Net Revenue aspect. Ask the Gajewski's next door.
Again, what does that mean? And what is "net revenue"? There is net income, but "revenue" is usually used as income prior to expenses, so there is no "net" that can be applied.
Make the station a success? Define "success."
Success for a commercial station means making a profit. Period.
Without a profit, one can not provide community service, fair pay for the staff, and all those other good things that a profitable station can do.
To hear one poster here (that apparently knows anything and everything that even remotely has to do with radio), the station is already a sweeping blazing unprecedented success. In fact, it is so much of a success that it leaves all other radio stations in the Buffalo area in it's 'success dust' so-to-speak. I disagree. Once I get your definition of success, I'll revisit my response, if you'd like.
Apparently the station is billing nicely and serving an under-served portion of the audience. Those two conditions are conducive to profitability.
Have a great day - for the WECK listeners reading this... turn your hearing aids up and get a fresh Depends, because meals-on-wheels is almost there and a Mama's Family rerun is about to start.
I am going to have to wipe the snark off my screen.
About a third of the MSA population is over 55. Using ACS (the annual survey done by the Census Bureau), we see that the lowest rate of poverty is in the 55-64 and 65+ demographics. With life expediencies averaging in the late 70's (meaning lots of seniors are in their 80's and 90's), there is a lot of money in the demo. While national brands and services generally don't focus on that demo for a variety of reasons, local retailers and service providers know that seniors are a prime market for many local providers.
The "depends" remark is uncalled for and mean-spirited; it disqualifies you from any meaningful dialogue.