I was tipped off that a consultant was retained by a broadcast group in Houston to discuss the viability of an AAA or Alt formatted station on a "poorly performing" signal. The only station that really fits that is KROI.
Didn't Urban One at one point run at least one modern/alt outlet? Louisville, KY I think.
Isn't KROI owned by Urban One? There entire business is targetted at African Americans? There's no way they will launch an Alternative/AAA? They don't have the knowledge of how to operate or sell it.
How does the billing compare on KLOL vs KHMX? If the rumour is true, either could be targets, right?
Isn't KROI owned by Urban One? There entire business is targetted at African Americans? There's no way they will launch an Alternative/AAA? They don't have the knowledge of how to operate or sell it.
AAA would bomb in Houston, demographics not favorable to the format, and AAA doesn't work elsewhere, with rare exceptions.
Alternative? How do you go against or differentiate yourself from KTBZ? That genre is fragmented and losing audience in general.
Nonetheless, I would love to check out a new and innovative format, just to see what that would sound like in 2020 and beyond.
Houston seems more accepting of a Mainstream Rock or Active Rock, IMO.
Based on what?
The demographics and musical preferences of Houston-area posters to radiodiscussions?
Based on what?
I know it was a long time ago, but KLOL and KSRR were successful for a long time as well.
I'll speculate with you guys for a moment, and swing for the fences. KQBT 93.7 The Beat. The facility has a fairly recent 20 year history as a rock station of some form, and "The Beat" has not exactly set the world on fire in Houston, nor been able to dethrone The Box as "Houston's home for Hip-Hop", since launching in 2014. IHeart knows the Alt format well, and has the market experience from its years of Buzz ownership.
Which full market signals are not billing well?Wrong. KLOL has a huge audience level and very strong billing.
Based on my opinion, as I stated. I know it was a long time ago, but KLOL and KSRR were successful for a long time as well.
I didn't realize the idea of a Mainstream Rock outlet doing well in Houston was an absurdity.
Then the demographics changed, and a lot of what worked in Houston 20 years ago doesn't work as well any more. That's a problem for longtime Houstonians who either haven't noticed the changes, or don't understand why they should affect radio.