For many years I lived in Broward County and the Ft. Lauderdale area. It was rare for me to venture into Palm Beach County. I had relatives around Lake Worth and very southern West Palm Beach. To me, Palm Beach County had a completely different vibe than Miami and Ft. Lauderdale. I've long followed radio ratings and even there told a story of differences. But then again, I'm talking about the late 70s, 80s and most of the 90s. A lot has changed in Palm Beach County and in a lot of Florida as well.
I've mentioned this many times but programing in large swaths of Florida can have its challenges as much has changed over time. West Palm's WIRK-FM has been doing the country format for quite a long time. The ratings, as I remember them, showed the station at top or near the top very consistently and dependably. This represented a huge difference in the market to the south (Miami/Ft. Lauderdale) as the Country format was usually not much in the Top 10.
The full market signal stations (at least most of them) at the top of the hour ID would say something like "Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, and the Palm Beaches." I haven't heard that in many years. If there's still a station that does that, it would be interesting to know.
I can only assume the Palm Beach radio market objected to that practice. Before Comcast came along buying out a small cable company that served the "Palm Aire" area of Pompano Beach, they offered a number of local West Palm TV stations. On occasion, I tuned in. Much of the news presentations were far different than what Miami offered. Again, there's was a completely different vibe and almost small town sounding way back when.
Ironically, even though I live further away on the Treasure Coast from Palm Beach County than I did when I lived in Broward, I visit there at least once a month. Driving around, I'm now surprised that Palm Beach County just cracks the Top 50 radio markets. It looks every bit like the big city with all the traffic and what seems housing and condos on every inch of ground. There tons of things to do there and it's a huge change from what I once thought.
During the Hurricane Dorian scare, all the TV news stations discussed their various radio partners. There's quite a lot of stations but there's few that can be heard from the Palm Beaches to all through the Treasure Coast. (Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River County) Hubbard Radio is a new player in West Palm and I believe they warrant discussion.
Theirs is an interesting cluster. (Hot AC, County, Classic Hits, Urban AC, Hip Hop, News/Talk, and Sports.) There's Hot AC WRMF which has been a heritage ratings winner for as long as I can remember. In one of the few instances I tuned into WRMF sometimes in much younger days. I recall Kevin Kitchens and his morning show. I think he was on for a long time. Some of the music was different than Miami/Ft. Lauderdale contemporary stations but it was to my liking.
A big change Hubbard made was flipping the long AC format WEAT-FM to Classic Hits. I don't believe West Palm has ever had a dedicated classic hits station. I could be wrong. When Miami's WMXJ was Magic 102.7, that station regularly made West Palm's ratings. I suspect there were lots of Magic listeners in the Boca/Delray area. In fact there was a time, I recall hearing contest winners who lived in Palm Beach County on Miami/Ft. Lauderdale stations. That has changed. What's also changed is Magic 102.7 has been rebranded and the music is far more rhythmic than in the past. I never see WMXJ in West Palm's ratings anymore. So apparently Hubbard saw a hole in the market. It's got a killer signal. If it weren't for a translator on 107.9 in Indian River County, WEAT FM would come in clearly there too. One day that happened. Nice while it lasted.
Sunny 107.9 (WEAT-FM) is branded as "The Greatest Hits of the 70's, 80's, and 90's." I've listened to the station on my many road trips. It's done pretty well. There's more rhythmic titles and deeper treks into the 90s than "The Treasure's Coast's Greatest Hits" WQOL but not nearly as much as Miami's 102.7 The Beach. Sunny's younger sister station WRMF has been heavily advertising "The best variety of the 2000's, 10's and today." So now they have a 70s, 80's and 90's station. It probably explains why AC was flipped. In fact there was a time West Palm seemed to have too many AC stations.
Hubbard has also heavily promoted their country format WIRK and the new rebranding of "New Country 103.1 - South Florida's Country Music." Perhaps this is to improve 25-54 numbers and skew younger. WIRK is a heritage radio station so there's probably many loyal listeners but younger listeners are being encouraged to tune into them also.
Anyway, there's lots to talk about. West Palm is an interesting media market. Much has changed there. While I know nothing about Hubbard Radio, it's good to see them make investments and promotions. I have to wonder if Hubbard would be interested in expanding to other Florida areas.
I've mentioned this many times but programing in large swaths of Florida can have its challenges as much has changed over time. West Palm's WIRK-FM has been doing the country format for quite a long time. The ratings, as I remember them, showed the station at top or near the top very consistently and dependably. This represented a huge difference in the market to the south (Miami/Ft. Lauderdale) as the Country format was usually not much in the Top 10.
The full market signal stations (at least most of them) at the top of the hour ID would say something like "Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, and the Palm Beaches." I haven't heard that in many years. If there's still a station that does that, it would be interesting to know.
I can only assume the Palm Beach radio market objected to that practice. Before Comcast came along buying out a small cable company that served the "Palm Aire" area of Pompano Beach, they offered a number of local West Palm TV stations. On occasion, I tuned in. Much of the news presentations were far different than what Miami offered. Again, there's was a completely different vibe and almost small town sounding way back when.
Ironically, even though I live further away on the Treasure Coast from Palm Beach County than I did when I lived in Broward, I visit there at least once a month. Driving around, I'm now surprised that Palm Beach County just cracks the Top 50 radio markets. It looks every bit like the big city with all the traffic and what seems housing and condos on every inch of ground. There tons of things to do there and it's a huge change from what I once thought.
During the Hurricane Dorian scare, all the TV news stations discussed their various radio partners. There's quite a lot of stations but there's few that can be heard from the Palm Beaches to all through the Treasure Coast. (Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River County) Hubbard Radio is a new player in West Palm and I believe they warrant discussion.
Theirs is an interesting cluster. (Hot AC, County, Classic Hits, Urban AC, Hip Hop, News/Talk, and Sports.) There's Hot AC WRMF which has been a heritage ratings winner for as long as I can remember. In one of the few instances I tuned into WRMF sometimes in much younger days. I recall Kevin Kitchens and his morning show. I think he was on for a long time. Some of the music was different than Miami/Ft. Lauderdale contemporary stations but it was to my liking.
A big change Hubbard made was flipping the long AC format WEAT-FM to Classic Hits. I don't believe West Palm has ever had a dedicated classic hits station. I could be wrong. When Miami's WMXJ was Magic 102.7, that station regularly made West Palm's ratings. I suspect there were lots of Magic listeners in the Boca/Delray area. In fact there was a time, I recall hearing contest winners who lived in Palm Beach County on Miami/Ft. Lauderdale stations. That has changed. What's also changed is Magic 102.7 has been rebranded and the music is far more rhythmic than in the past. I never see WMXJ in West Palm's ratings anymore. So apparently Hubbard saw a hole in the market. It's got a killer signal. If it weren't for a translator on 107.9 in Indian River County, WEAT FM would come in clearly there too. One day that happened. Nice while it lasted.
Sunny 107.9 (WEAT-FM) is branded as "The Greatest Hits of the 70's, 80's, and 90's." I've listened to the station on my many road trips. It's done pretty well. There's more rhythmic titles and deeper treks into the 90s than "The Treasure's Coast's Greatest Hits" WQOL but not nearly as much as Miami's 102.7 The Beach. Sunny's younger sister station WRMF has been heavily advertising "The best variety of the 2000's, 10's and today." So now they have a 70s, 80's and 90's station. It probably explains why AC was flipped. In fact there was a time West Palm seemed to have too many AC stations.
Hubbard has also heavily promoted their country format WIRK and the new rebranding of "New Country 103.1 - South Florida's Country Music." Perhaps this is to improve 25-54 numbers and skew younger. WIRK is a heritage radio station so there's probably many loyal listeners but younger listeners are being encouraged to tune into them also.
Anyway, there's lots to talk about. West Palm is an interesting media market. Much has changed there. While I know nothing about Hubbard Radio, it's good to see them make investments and promotions. I have to wonder if Hubbard would be interested in expanding to other Florida areas.