Have you paid a bit of attention to the business lately?The other iheart philly stations are here to stay. Aint no way in hell iheart is flipping two stations in the same market during the same time
Have you paid a bit of attention to the business lately?The other iheart philly stations are here to stay. Aint no way in hell iheart is flipping two stations in the same market during the same time
Ive been working so noHave you paid a bit of attention to the business lately?
So this is the confusing part….The issue is with 18-24. In 25 and over, the loss of listeners is minimal and the reduction in listener TSL is much smaller.
18-24 is not a sales demo. WUSL ranks higher in 25-34 than in 18-24. WIOQ similarly does very well in 25-34. WRFF is a 25-49 station; it is 18th in 18-24 which is not its target.
WIOQ's core is 25-44 females. That is what it likely sells by, too.
The issue with WRFF is not ratings, it is sales. It has had for years a power ration of less than 0.5. Their problem is that advertisers don't buy it.
"Lately" as in "over the past few years," not "lately" as in "while I was at work yesterday."Ive been working so no
It's apparently stable enough and low enough cost when you compare with the high cost of a format change.So this is the confusing part….
You’ve said for over a decade that WRFF has terrible billing, yet iHeart has changed format on 106.1 three times in the last decade while RFF has only rebranded and changed morning staff in the last decade.
Why is this? Thanks in advance.
And yet ample time to keep beating the “it will be hot AC” drum. Sure.Ive been working so no
That’s pretty surprising that the costs of the various formats on 106.1 have been high enough that it always gets the axe rather than 104.5, considering it bills quite a bit more.It's apparently stable enough and low enough cost when you compare with the high cost of a format change.
Example: if three big companies each have four or five FMs, then some of them are going to be outside the top 10 in billings and ratings because you can't have 12, 13, 14 or 15 "Top 10" stations.
In October 2021, Audacy-owned WNSH in the NYC/NJ area allowed its staff members to say goodbye when it ended its country format, and it was not a heritage station.Some stations let staff say goodbye but this is only heritage stations?
That’s what I think too. Like how WDAS and WUSL go well together. WIOQ and WISX could be packaged togetherWhile I still think that Country is the most likely format for 106.1, I still think a WKTU-like flanker could work. Here's why:
1. It would compliment Q102 and, to an extent, Alt 104.5.
2. It would allow iHeart to build a "wall" of young listeners, with both male and female demos covered between Power, Q, Alt, and 106.1.
3. It would be better to compete against the weaker WTDY than against the stronger WXTU.
4. The station would be more Rhythmic than WTDY.
5. There are plenty of markets in which iHeart does not have a Country outlet, including NYC, Miami, Orlando, Los Angeles, and Chicago.
Again ... where's the money in a station that complements an underachiever like WRFF, or, as CassChopper suggested, competes with a weak station like WTDY? WXTU is doing well in a format that's thriving right now, and iHeart has a popular national country show that it wants to put in more major markets to appeal more to national advertisers. It's not going to set up shop with a country format in hardwired-for-rhythmic NYC, Miami, Orlando and LA, but country is working in greater Philadelphia. Unless there's a national rhythmic AC or active rock show iHeart wants to push -- and I'm not aware of any -- country is odds-on favorite to land on 106.1, IMO.Agree that the format wheel likely lands on an iHeart country affiliate, but could be interesting to see them pipe in a classic rock feed or maybe a "Rock Nation" station, which is a bit more active rock then WMMR to better compliment 104.5.
... where's the money in a station that ... competes with a weak station like WTDY?
In October 2021, Audacy-owned WNSH in the NYC/NJ area allowed its staff members to say goodbye when it ended its country format, and it was not a heritage station.
(Note, for the sake of discussion, I'm making up billing numbers. These aren't accurate at all, and are just for example)While I still think that Country is the most likely format for 106.1, I still think a WKTU-like flanker could work. Here's why:
3. It would be better to compete against the weaker WTDY than against the stronger WXTU.