This whole thread started because of people bashing on a local owner who provides local jobs and local content.
Not me.
This whole thread started because of people bashing on a local owner who provides local jobs and local content.
No I don't hate corporate radio, but I do hate people bashing on local owners. This whole thread started because of people bashing on a local owner who provides local jobs and local content.
So that makes it ok??
Let's use the 5million dollar mark for conversation purposes at KILT. The station in 2008 was doing 20million. 15 million in profit is not a bad place to be (but not enough for greedy corporate executives)
Nothing against people like Eddie Martiny, Sarah Frazier and Mark Krieschen. I guess many of you think is better to be on the winning side than the losing side and I can respect that. I like rooting for the underdog.
Speaking of 97.5, why are the chances this was staged?
https://twitter.com/BackAftaThis/status/1306035300397912065?s=19 (NSFW language).
Having been a "local owner" myself once, I don't feel bad about criticizing an owner who has tried to be successful with horrible facilities and bad decisions.
In fact, one of the "local owners" I worked with was local. And the worst, by a country mile, was also local. They come in all flavors.
This industry is littered with people with good intentions and bad signals.
You can put the best programming on a bad signal or you can put lousy programming on a bad signal, either way, people won't listen to a station that they cannot receive, and either way it's not going to work.
Unpopular opinion, but entirely my own: voice tracking is not evil. There is no magic that comes from being in a studio speaking live versus speaking into a computer. The magic comes from the words that you speak and what you inspire people to do.
But having worked both "local" and "corporate" radio gigs, I appreciate that in the corporate environment the equipment is well maintained, the toilets properly flush, the building is secure, and the paychecks don't bounce. When you're working for smaller operations that aren't well funded you can't take those things for granted...
Everybody thinks that running a radio station is easy. When you start actually being responsible for all of it, you learn quickly that none of it is easy, and all the things your boss made you do that you hated were actually necessary.
The best decision I ever made in my career was while doing due diligence on buying a station, backing out of it when I realized just how much of a mess that place was and how I could never make enough to make the station profitable. I've kept my eye on that station over the years. They haven't turned in the license yet, but 22 years after turning it down it's still a silent STA more than it's on the air.
97.5 and 92.5 are broadcasting different things. I heard “ESPN 92.5”
Markw.. Sounds like you have personal beef! not sure what credentials you would have to call it a mickey mouse operation.. last time i checked gow owns his broadcasting company and i'm willing yo bet you do not.
A low-rated operation on very bad technical facilities would seem to qualify under that perhaps overly negative term.
Markw.. Sounds like you have personal beef! not sure what credentials you would have to call it a mickey mouse operation.. last time i checked gow owns his broadcasting company and i'm willing yo bet you do not.
Signal or no signal ,Numbers or no Numbers they seem to be making money.. I know of some great full power stations with numbers that are down to barebone in staff because they are making no money.
Getting back on topic: Gow is again doing splits: 92.5 is carrying the national feed of the Astros playoff games, while normal local programming continues on 97.5.
The TOH ID on KFNC has changed: It now includes an additional reference to an HD-2, which could be the feeder for 92.5. I am not receiving any HD on 97.5 at my Cy-Fair location, though I have no problem getting HD on 98.5 and 107.9, also eastern rimshots.
However, doing some measuring, the KFNC transmitter is about nine miles further away from my location than the two Estrella Media rimshots. So perhaps that additional distance is too much for any presumed HD signal to cover. Or the HD signal, if it exists, is much lower power than the other rimshots. Anyone in the east side of the market with an HD radio able to check on this?