Satellite radio usage for news/talk? The only 'news' available is NPR via a translator of KUNR Reno, and whatever TOH newscasts the FMs use...KSRW was using NBC, then Westwood One before they ceased their service; I think KIBS (or KBOV) has TOH news from ABC. Radio-Locator shows a fringe signal of KMJ 580 making it into Bishop, but take R-L with a grain of salt and know that there are 14,000-foot peaks in between Bishop and the Central Valley.
Talk radio was never tried on the old 600 AM in Independence I assume. Are there any other locales like this that have nearly 30,000 people in two counties with no nearby news/talk station?
No matter what, I'm glad the eastern Sierra hasn't gone fully to the satellites like many small-town areas. It could be worse - nothing local. That's what I expected to find when I pulled up KSRW's stream for the first time several years ago. The advertising keeps it going, but to what extent they will recover post-pandemic, we'll see.
Well, KIBS does local news. If they were to do a satellite N/T on KBOV, they could do network at the top and repurpose (or simulcast) a local newscast to follow in certain hours (there's just not enough happening on that side of the Sierra to justify hourly local news).
I vaguely recall Rush being cleared on KBOV in the early-mid 90s. There's been an ownership change since that. Maybe that's when the decision was made to stick with music on the AM.
Nobody's listening to KMJ in Bishop. Even before the noise floor got bad, daytime AM signals in the market were unlistenable through the static.
600 AM in Independence was an automated A/C, but it was owned by the late Bennett Kessler (who founded KSRW and the whole Sierra Wave radio-TV-online thing), so it had significant local news and I believe a TOH network. I don't know exactly how long it was on the air before it went dark, but I want to say it was gone before there was much satellite talk out there besides maybe Larry King in overnights on Mutual.
I'm not advocating KBOV go talk---the world doesn't need one more AM pumping out the same stuff---I just wonder how many people, even in Bishop, will listen to music on AM.
For those who haven't read my stuff before about this market, my family was there from 1920 to 1995, I lived there from 1965 to 1974 and for about six months from late 1975 to early 1976, started at what's now KBOV in 1971 as a jock, became music director and program director, and helped put what's now KIBS on the air from the original owner's garage in the fall of 1974. I did mornings and was PD there.
I imagine satellite is absolutely a factor. People in that area always bristled at the lack of choice. When it got around that you could get L.A. FM stations by putting your radio next to your TV if you had cable, you'd have thought water had just been invented. When KKDJ, Los Angeles (now KIIS-FM) went up on a not-sure-if-it-was-legal 10 watt translator in the early 70s, every kid at Bishop High figured out a way to put FM in their cars and altered their cruising routes to stay within the signal. Car dealers (there were a bunch in those days) ordered their inventory with FM or tape decks.
I haven't been to Bishop much in a long time. Eight years since my last visit, three since I last drove through, but I gotta think that the take rate for SiriusXM is probably really strong.