Except that 2022 is nothing like 2006.It’s 2006 all over again. Even the same name of the station that’s replacing the soft AC. I wonder if Rumba 106.1 will fail just like Rumba 104.5 did.
Except that 2022 is nothing like 2006.It’s 2006 all over again. Even the same name of the station that’s replacing the soft AC. I wonder if Rumba 106.1 will fail just like Rumba 104.5 did.
It’s not the same station. And it’s been 16 years.Why are they so heavy on Reggaeton I don’t remover rumba 104.5 being this heavy on that genre
I think the ratings are going to be low. I don't think the demographics in philadelphia will support a station like rumbaOutside of WDAS? That's a rather big exclusion, and ignores Power and Q. We have yet to see how the new Rumba will perform.
You don't just carve out the strongest performer and then say it's week when the strongest performer is consistently solid.
Aside from Atlanta, where Cox is very dominant, there are some PPM markets where iHeart is weak. In the Hampton Roads, only WOWI is in the top ten, and two iHeart stations there are underperforming very badly. In Indianapolis, only WFBQ (Q95) is doing well, but the others have subpar ratings. In the Inland Empire, KGGI has been a laggard, and forget about the other stations in the Riverside cluster having any viability.Philly seems to be iHeart weakest large markets outside of WDAS
Rumba has been doing substantial enough in Lancaster and Reading, plus the one is Boston is doing well for a weaker signal. Time will tell.I think the ratings are going to be low. I don't think the demographics in philadelphia will support a station like rumba
I wouldn't be the least bit surprised to see Country on 104.5 before the end of the year. iHeart is clearly trying to fix what's broken with this cluster and they can't pretend that WRFF isn't broken.I could see them making a move At 104.5 down the line possibly putting country on that frequency and moving the alt format to hd-2 time will tell
Revenue (and profitability) matter. You can post away about low ratings. That entirely misses the point. They're hitting the ground with some "founding partners" already lined up. No one is saying they're all blue chip, Fortune 100 brands, but there is a path to solid monetization.I think the ratings are going to be low. I don't think the demographics in philadelphia will support a station like rumba
That is because reggaetón has taken over pop music. It's all reggaetón or highly rhythmic today.Why are they so heavy on Reggaeton I don’t remover rumba 104.5 being this heavy on that genre
And a very different culture. When Radio One did regional Mexican in Houston, inside the building there was a cultural divide. And, today, many Hispanics are complaining that Latinos are being "forgotten" and all the attention is going to African Americans (I hear this from many friends at all socioeconomic levels).I know Urban One has no idea probably how to do it, but with their struggles, too bad they couldn’t have experimented with a Spanish format on 100.3. They do have some other formats like news/talk and Hot AC but I guess Spanish would have been a heavy lift since it’s an entirely different language.
They have over 30 Spanish LANGUAGE stations ("Spanish stations" are in Spain) in the US and a joint agreement with another dozen in Puerto Rico. They also are associated with Grupo Acir in Mexico, and that company operates nearly 100 stations in that nationThey had a Spanish station in Houston years ago and they have a a few regional Mexican stations
Simply put, it is much more reggaetón based now because that is where Spanish language CHR is today. No more pop, no ballads, no rock. It is all reggaetón and rhythmic in the format.I'm sure @DavidEduardo can clarify much better than I can, but no, the format of Rumba 106.1 is not the same format as was on Rumba 104.5 and Rumba 1480
David I was talking about when radio one had a Spanish station in Houston not i heartThey have over 30 Spanish LANGUAGE stations ("Spanish stations" are in Spain) in the US and a joint agreement with another dozen in Puerto Rico. They also are associated with Grupo Acir in Mexico, and that company operates nearly 100 stations in that nation
Oh man, I forgot WIFI/92.9 existed up there. I always focused on WHAT (99.9/1340) and WEMG (105.7/1310) here in Philly.So what happens to all of the translators in the area?
As in 92.9 here in Bucks, 105.7 Le Megga?
Keep in mind I do not know spanish or spanish music, so I wouldn't know if these stations are different formats than Rumba.
Oh, don't get David going about La Mera Mera without having some popcorn ready.David I was talking about when radio one had a Spanish station in Houston not i heart