Actually there are two stations, WSB-AM and then the FM side-kick which may have more of the audience...You're talking about the #1, most listened-to radio station in Atlanta, as well as the #1 billing station in Atlanta.
Actually there are two stations, WSB-AM and then the FM side-kick which may have more of the audience...You're talking about the #1, most listened-to radio station in Atlanta, as well as the #1 billing station in Atlanta.
Nielsen lists the FM separately. WSB (AM) has a simulcast partner on FM, but the ratings are "single line reporting" which means that the simulcast AM and FM are listed under one station... in this case the heritage AM call letters. As mentioned, WSB (AM) is one of the highest billing radio stations in America, not just the highest biller in Atlanta.Actually there are two stations, WSB-AM and then the FM side-kick which may have more of the audience...
Is that all there is to it? Who, or what out there, says that Right Wing programming, is what WSB-AM needs to broadcast?
For sake of argument, if all the talk radio was magically and suddenly stopped - would AM radio then have no listeners?The only people who listen to AM radio any more are old, mostly white, conservative men. Right-wing talk and religion are the formats for them.
Sports talk and play-by-play would still attract listeners and advertisers providing those stations don't have an FM simulcast (either through management not wanting to blow up a successful music FM or not having an FM outlet at all to move to). Otherwise -- and I sense you are trying to get someone here to admit music programming on AM is still viable -- sorry, you're broadcasting to 70-to-grave with oldies and classic country on AM and to practically nobody with anything resembling a contemporary music format.For sake of argument, if all the talk radio was magically and suddenly stopped - would AM radio then have no listeners?
I sense you are trying to get someone here to admit music programming on AM is still viable
Yes, I remember. WABC was one of those stations. Six years later, WNBC (AM) signed off for good.To be honest, music programming on AM ceased to be viable when FM became standard equipment and the majority of listeners could receive it. That was around 1982. That's when most of the major AM stations gave up on music.
No, not really. I'm trying to understand why Right Wing programming is so prevalent (and apparently viable) on the AM band, particularly here in the Atlanta area. WSB with their clear channel frequency dominates the band, yet management decided that they also needed an FM frequency to simulcast their broadcast. Was this simulcast move made due to a reduction of the number of listeners to the AM station?-- and I sense you are trying to get someone here to admit music programming on AM is still viable --
Had the FCC standardized on AM Stereo and allowed the transmitted audio bandwidth to be 15 kHz, then perhaps the situation might have been a little different.
I have a Radio Shack knockoff of a GE Superadio and it has a narrow-wide selector for AM bandwidth. If you're listening to a strong station and selectivity is OK, setting it for wide makes a big difference in sound.There was a good article about the demise of AM car radio audio fidelity in Radio World Magazine recently. In an attempt to fight all of the interference in the AM band, receiver selectivity has been significantly improved. The downside is that the receiver narrower passband restricts the audio response that people expect for music.
Early 80s you could still have the "I only have AM in the work car" audience but other than that......To be honest, music programming on AM ceased to be viable when FM became standard equipment and the majority of listeners could receive it. That was around 1982. That's when most of the major AM stations gave up on music. None of them wanted to. They were still fully staffed with legendary talent. But the writing was on the wall and the audience was abandoning AM for FM. By the end of the 80s, two of the heritage radio owners, NBC and GE, sold their radio divisions.
Hence my observation that "WSB needs little programming advice just now."Huh? WSB (AM) outbills the #2 station by almost exactly two to one and before the pademic was the 4th highest billing radio station in the whole country.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
And it goes back, historically, even further: in 1977 the national average tilted for the first time towards over half of all listening being to FM stations. Even before that, around 1975, the music listening majority had moved to FM.To be honest, music programming on AM ceased to be viable when FM became standard equipment and the majority of listeners could receive it. That was around 1982. That's when most of the major AM stations gave up on music. None of them wanted to. They were still fully staffed with legendary talent. But the writing was on the wall and the audience was abandoning AM for FM. By the end of the 80s, two of the heritage radio owners, NBC and GE, sold their radio divisions.
What your point is has become woefully unclear. How is it that the #1 biller in the market needs any advice at all?Hence my observation that "WSB needs little programming advice just now."
Not sure how that became unclear.
Nothing is viable on AM in Atlanta these days. There is only one decent signal 24/7 (750), and essentially no one is listening to it.I'm trying to understand why Right Wing programming is so prevalent (and apparently viable) on the AM band, particularly here in the Atlanta area. WSB with their clear channel frequency dominates the band, yet management decided that they also needed an FM frequency to simulcast their broadcast. Was this simulcast move made due to a reduction of the number of listeners to the AM station?
The reason for the sharp 10 kHz roll-off was not noise... it was heterodyning with adjacent channel stations 10 kHz up or down the dial. And that was due to adding way too many AM stations to the band. So, limiting audio to a sharp 10 kHz bandwidth kept heterodyne interference to a minimum simply by making the heterodyne inaudible.They couldn't allow AM bandwidth to be 15Khz. And frequency response isn't AM's biggest problem. It's noise.
Even 10khz is too much for most receivers today. Here's an article from 17 years ago about AM bandwidth:
The reason for the sharp 10 kHz roll-off was not noise... it was heterodyning with adjacent channel stations
I answered this before, but it can't be emphasized enough how badly man-made noise has impacted the usable coverage range of AM stations. Light dimmers, fluorescent lights, wall warts, computers and anything with a microchip, and all kinds of other electronic and electrical devices have reduced the coverage of AM stations due to increasing man-made noise on the AM band.No, not really. I'm trying to understand why Right Wing programming is so prevalent (and apparently viable) on the AM band, particularly here in the Atlanta area. WSB with their clear channel frequency dominates the band, yet management decided that they also needed an FM frequency to simulcast their broadcast. Was this simulcast move made due to a reduction of the number of listeners to the AM station?
FM stereo came too late to be useful. It was supposed to start around 1979, but one of the proposed system developers held it up for nearly 5 more years... and by that time FM had about 70% of all music listening nationally.Had the FCC standardized on AM Stereo and allowed the transmitted audio bandwidth to be 15 kHz, then perhaps the situation might have been a little different.