Charlotte is trading their Charlotte cluster to Radio One. This is WBT 1110 /99.3 WLNK, WFNZ. In exchange Entercom will get stations in DC, Philadelphia and St. Lewis. Why no mention of it here?
Charlotte is trading their Charlotte cluster to Radio One. This is WBT 1110 /99.3 WLNK, WFNZ. In exchange Entercom will get stations in DC, Philadelphia and St. Lewis. Why no mention of it here?
It's great how Urban One is growing their cluster in this market, maybe they could move The Block to 107.9 from 92.7, so that way The Block can now out perform Powerless 98. And then move WFNZ to 92.7 from the 102.5 translator. Then perhaps WBT can use the 102.5 translator to boost their signal where its harder to receive 99.3.
Because not everybody checks this board religiously. Not like the old days.
*St. Louis.
I don’t see them sacrificing ‘LNK. Pre-Covid, Bob and Sheri pulled in a decent chunk of $ for that cluster, and are likely top 10 AM drive. If anything, I see some more spinning of the cluster to someone else...again.
Bob was a DJ back in the early 70s. That makes him at least 70. Shouldn't he be thinking about retirement? Or at the very least he should be hosting a show for adult standards radio. I don't know how old Sheri is.The one issue is that Bob and Sherri and Matt and Ramona are syndicated. Not sure what would happen to them. Urban One doesn't have any conservative talk or adult contemporary stations.
Bob was a DJ back in the early 70s. That makes him at least 70. Shouldn't he be thinking about retirement? Or at the very least he should be hosting a show for adult standards radio. I don't know how old Sheri is.
They're not going to spin it to someone else. Charlotte is a market that used to be not profitable for Urban One, but they've turned that around the last couple of years. They have 2 full market signals now with 105.3 and 107.9. If they combine 92.7 and 99.3 they could cover most of the market. 102.5 could also enhance 100.9's coverage area.
I do see them flipping the formats, though. Urban One targets black audiences, and they're not going to keep WBT as a conservative talk station. They may keep it as a talk station, but I would expect a shift to more news based or liberal leaning. I don't see them keeping WLNK as an AC either. WLNK is the lowest ranked AC behind WKQC and WLKO. The one issue is that Bob and Sherri and Matt and Ramona are syndicated. Not sure what would happen to them. Urban One doesn't have any conservative talk or adult contemporary stations.
(Also, middling ratings doesn’t always tell the whole picture. Revenue speaks volumes, though Covid has changed that for the moment.)
WBT has been the #1 biller every year, and last year it was about 10% over the #2 station. It has a big "don't mess with me" sign on it.
The company has branched out into other non-urban formats the last few years (Radio Now in Indy, the short lived News 92 in Houston and two La Grande stations in Indy and now Columbus, as well as the sports-formatted WXGI in Richmond, to name a few). What’s to say that the status quo remains?
(Also, middling ratings doesn’t always tell the whole picture. Revenue speaks volumes, though Covid has changed that for the moment.)
Top biller or not, conservative talk doesn’t fit Urban One’s overall business strategy.
A business strategy is to become top biller. Otherwise its not a business strategy. It's a social agenda or something else. And that's OK. But don't confuse blowing up a top biller with a business strategy.
It’s true that U1 has done some non-urban formats. However, that’s only in markets with smaller black populations where they don’t want to fragment the audience, where the urban market is already saturated or where a station is not profitable (for example KROI). But make no mistake, Urban One is a company that targets the black audience first. Top biller or not, conservative talk doesn’t fit Urban One’s overall business strategy. I don’t see them keeping WBT in its current form.
Charlotte is the 12th largest black DMA. Urban One’s problem here has been that they only have one full market signal. Prior to 2012, they only had 2 class A’s that barely cover Charlotte. This deal is more about being competitive in the urban space than it is about expanding into the general market. WOSF does well, but WQNC and WPZS continue to struggle mainly due to their limited signals.
107.9 is one of the strongest sticks in the market, and if you combine 99.3 and 102.5 with 92.7 and 100.9 they can reach a much larger audience.
It might not matter anyway, given his current situation.I don't see Urban One keeping the right wing trash like Rush Limbaugh, though.
What were you trying to say here?They can not destroy the as
What were you trying to say here?
Houston is bigger than Charlotte, and so is Indianapolis. Two examples of where they have general market stations. Charlotte's MSA is 23% Black, so it is not an immense Black radio market.
WBT was priced based on revenue. They are a public corporation with a board. They can not destroy the as
Like most cities, the African American population is concentrated in central city areas. If you cover the HDBAs, then you are relatively competitive. You have to program for the meters in a transactional market, and the meters are in the HDBAs.
And there is no radio DMA. That is a TV term. Metered markets have only a TSA.
Not really. Look at the percentage of Black listeners that are just in the HDBA areas... just as the percentage in the HDHA for Hispanics. Cover them, and you can win.
In any case, they are not going to touch ongoing revenue producers and certainly not the top biller in the market, an AM, when AMs are further prejudiced by the much younger average age of African Americans and where there is no other format that works, nationally, for a big AM signal in a market that size. What they might do is add an FM, even a Class A, to the AM signal.
They’ve explained that this deal was about deleveraging underperforming assets and being more competitive in Charlotte.