In a perfect, hypothetical world, 94.7 should have gone to EMF and 95.5 stayed the commercial station.
Cumulus was looking to get the most money, and that came from EMF. The deal for 94.7 didn't involve any money, just trade.
In a perfect, hypothetical world, 94.7 should have gone to EMF and 95.5 stayed the commercial station.
Isn't Boca Raton part of the West Palm Beach media market (both radio and television)? Granted, most Miami radio stations cover Boca Raton well, but still.The costs are a lower there, and logistically, it's a lot easier to manage there.
By that, I mean working with advertisers in Boca Raton is easier than working with advertisers in NJ.
Isn't Boca Raton part of the West Palm Beach media market (both radio and television)? Granted, most Miami radio stations cover Boca Raton well, but still.
All Palm Beach County is a single market and not part of Miami.Isn't Boca Raton part of the West Palm Beach media market (both radio and television)? Granted, most Miami radio stations cover Boca Raton well, but still.
It's not just the five boroughs. It is the western part of Nassau, and the area on NJ closest to the river which are highly ethnic, as is the first segment of Westchester nearest to The Bronx.WKIS is licensed to Boca but the tower is in Miami Gardens, west of Hollywood. Culturally WKIS fits well with the Hollywood/Boca area. It's a lot more fluid, less targeted than Miami proper. What I'm seeing with this change in NY is the company is taking a much narrower focus as far as sales target, primarily to the 5 boroughs rather than the larger market.
As is Essex County and parts of Passaic County.All Palm Beach County is a single market and not part of Miami.
It's not just the five boroughs. It is the western part of Nassau, and the area on NJ closest to the river which are highly ethnic, as is the first segment of Westchester nearest to The Bronx.
Also Jersey communities like New Brunswick and Edison are pretty ethnic.All Palm Beach County is a single market and not part of Miami.
It's not just the five boroughs. It is the western part of Nassau, and the area on NJ closest to the river which are highly ethnic, as is the first segment of Westchester nearest to The Bronx.
There is tons of streaming listening. Perhaps it is fair to say there isn't a lot of streaming listening to broadcast sources.No, it is the HD channels. There is vastly less streaming and Echo listening than new media fans believe.
rainnews.com
This. Their signal had always been overlooked because it was a Family Radio outlet for decades so next to no one knew it existed, but even then, anyone could look at a map and see the TX placement was horrible. Cumulus, for whatever reasons that escape me, didn’t do the upgrade to WNSH and modifications to WMAS and it never happened until Entercom got both stations. To be honest, it was too little, too late.It's a NE New Jersey station just a few miles from NYC, so it's a New York Metro Survey Area station. It does not cover all of New Jersey, just that NE corner that is part of the NYC radio metro area.
There are 9 NE New Jersey counties in the New York City radio metro. Advertisers buy the New York market, and there is no separate Northeast New Jersey market.
The quote reads "this was a suburban signal and could not compete in the full market."
This. Maybe there was a hope that WNSH could make some inroads when it had launched, but the mistake was immediately making it the centerpiece of a national brand. Cumulus didn’t even attempt to make it local or give it any local flavor.
That is what I was referring to. The ratings in the Nielsen radio markets do not include pure streaming plays, and the streamed local stations in LA make up less than 1% of all AQH listening.There is tons of streaming listening. Perhaps it is fair to say there isn't a lot of streaming listening to broadcast sources.
I wish the figures were better segregated by ethnicity and Hispanics by language preference / dominance. And I am not clear in the Edison study if on-demand streaming is aggregated with programmed streams.Among streaming audio users, it was 15-16 hours per week according to Edison Research in 2019 and 2020, which isn't that much different than broadcast radio.
What are some possible reasons the Country format is difficult to sell to advertisers in New York?
It seems that the audience has decent demos.
But advertisers buying the market know that. Most ad campaigns that include the major New York MSA market radio stations target the entire market. The Bed, Bath & Beyond or Staples or Burger King are promoting the brand that has outlets in Manhattan, the Boroughs and all the NY, NJ and CT counties that make up the market.The problem is the demo doesn't travel into NYC to do their shopping. Even those who commute tend to do their buying back home in the suburbs. Those habits became more entrenched during the pandemic.
The Bed, Bath & Beyond or Staples or Burger King are promoting the brand that has outlets in Manhattan, the Boroughs and all the NY, NJ and CT counties that make up the market.
So it's still unclear why advertisers in the New York metro don't buy the Country format as much as some others, despite decent demos.