Do you see Audacy changing any more of their New York FM stations? I think the Block is going to be very short lived
I think the Block is going to be very short lived
I feel the ratings are very telling as most listen for music. The higher rated stations in the city are very successful because they play occasional throwbacks, which is a good balance. The same stations many are committed to already listening, that I don't see many transitioning over to the Block, with airstaff. The same reason 92.3 Now/92.3 Amp struggled against Z100The Block has existed for hardly 3 months. They just hired a PD and haven't even hired airstaff. I feel your conclusion is a little too early at the moment.
The ratings right now are not indicative of the format's performance. I raise you this: The format launched in the last weeks of October, right as the holidays went into full swing. Not to mention I haven't seen much advertising of any kind promoting the new station. I'd say the ratings from here on out are much more telling.I feel the ratings are very telling as most listen for music. The higher rated stations in the city are very successful because they play occasional throwbacks, which is a good balance. The same stations many are committed to already listening, that I don't see many transitioning over to the Block, with airstaff. The same reason 92.3 Now/92.3 Amp struggled against Z100
You couldn't give one an FM simulcast without giving it to the other. Or you'd be dooming one of your two biggest revenue stations to eventual failure. The clock is ticking...
EMF doesn't seem to be hurting for assets. I would try to make a deal with Univision for 96.3. They just cashed out of 92.7.The other side of that is you're throwing out the revenue of two very hard to get FMs in NYC. Audacy can't buy any more FMs. They're at the limit. The profit margin of FM music stations is higher than that of all-news stations. At the end of the day, profits rule. Right now, both WINS and WCBS are making their revenues without need of an FM simulcast. There is no direct connection between adding an FM simulcast to either station and additional revenue. I'm not saying it won't happen at some point. But I don't see the advantage to doing it now.
If I'm Audacy I'm looking for a combination of assets (including 94.7) that I can trade with EMF for WPLJ.
But we both know that's not going to happen. That would be like K-Love on the weak WARW signal all over again.If I'm Audacy I'm looking for a combination of assets (including 94.7) that I can trade with EMF for WPLJ.
That's why he said a combo, including 94.7. The goal would be to put K-Love on the stronger signal and most likely Air 1 on 94.7. What would Audacy do with WPLJ is what I question. Probably move The Block over to that. I don't see them bringing only WINS or WCBS to any FM without the other.But we both know that's not going to happen. That would be like K-Love on the weak WARW signal all over again.
When EMF purchased WPLJ in 2019, a spokesman for EMF acknowledged the value of the call sign on 95.5.That's why he said a combo, including 94.7. The goal would be to put K-Love on the stronger signal and most likely Air 1 on 94.7. What would Audacy do with WPLJ is what I question. Probably move The Block over to that. I don't see them bringing only WINS or WCBS to any FM without the other.
EMF’s Randy Chase tells Radio Ink the company plans to keep the call letters after the takeover and “assess things after the dust settles. They are legendary calls.”
Yes, which is why Big A mentioned needing to trade more than just a single signal in this hypothetical deal.When EMF purchased WPLJ in 2019, a spokesman for EMF acknowledged the value of the call sign on 95.5.
Source: So What Will Happen to the WPLJ Calls? (Radio Ink)
Univision is not going to abandon a position in New York, as the market is key for its combined radio and television and new media operations.EMF doesn't seem to be hurting for assets. I would try to make a deal with Univision for 96.3. They just cashed out of 92.7.
I was referring to the notion of a trade not an outright sale.Univision is not going to abandon a position in New York, as the market is key for its combined radio and television and new media operations.
It does seem odd Audacy is using a basically suburban signal for an urban format,
True, Newark had its own R&B station from the 1970s to the early 1990s : WNJR (1430 AM). It was an affiliate of the National Black Network.Have you been to Northern NJ? It's pretty urban. West Essex is suburban, but downtown Newark is urban.
It has trouble in Manhattan, but is well within the range for the other Boroughs. And with a format that targets not just Blacks but (mostly) Hispanics and urban whites, the area it covers is well populated with potential listeners. There are 15 million people in the MSA that it covers with a 60 dbu signal, and that will increase a bit with the new site. More important, the 70 dbu will increase by nearly 2 million with the site move.What I should have said is that Audacy is trying to run an urban format on a signal that doesn't reach NYC very well.
I doubt that this station is primarily intended for NJ.