KRTY-FM along with KRTY-FM1 and KRTY-FM2 have been sold by KRTY Ltd to Educational Media Foundation.
The last rodeo for country in the Bay Area, perhaps? (Unless Santa Rosa counts as Bay Area, though the Santa Rosa stations do not reach either San Francisco, Oakland, or San Jose.)KRTY-FM along with KRTY-FM1 and KRTY-FM2 have been sold by KRTY Ltd to Educational Media Foundation.
Roughly a $3.1 million purchase price, similar to the price EMF paid to the owners of the late WABB-FM. But KRTY covers roughly as much people as WABB does within its respective 60 dBu despite being a class A.Wow, here's a small local owner, not a big corporation, selling to EMF. That says a lot:
I wouldn't hold my breath. The reality is that Audacy, nor any other major operator, will likely fill the void of this flip. I can't imagine country is a desirable demo for their cluster strategy.KGMZ and KITS are likely candidates for flipping, though these frequencies are not the strongest in the South Bay, where KRTY is strong.
Country is just a tough sell in New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.Changing demographics exceeded in KRTY's demise. We all expected it would happen at some point. But unfortunately it happened sooner.
Then-Entercom hasn't had success with 95.7 The Wolf. But Audacy has thrown a curveball and flipped WDZH in Detroit abruptly to alternative after the demise of the alternative format in CIMX. That's not to say there's a high possibility of Audacy succeeding with a flip to country given the poor billing of WNSH in NYC.I wouldn't hold my breath. The reality is that Audacy, nor any other major operator, will likely fill the void of this flip. I can't imagine country is a desirable demo for their cluster strategy.
Billing could tell a different story. $3 million is a low price for a Bay Area FM signal.Isn't KRTY #1 in the San Jose Market?
Alpha is at its cap. They already have 5 FMs in the San Francisco Market which is what would be counted for ownership. KKDV, KKIQ, KUIC, KBAY and KEZR. San Jose is a subset of San Francisco.The South Bay has lost an incredible amount of English language commercial stations over the past couple decades. KFFG, KSJO, KCNL, KARA and now KRTY.
KUFX, KEZR and KBAY are now all that's left in terms of commercial FMs with English language programming.
I'd like to see the KRTY intellectual property deployed elsewhere, or at minimum, I'd like to see someone flip to Country.
Alpha probably didn't bid on 95.3 because they figured its flip to religious programming would directly benefit its incumbent stations, so they'd have little to gain by adding an additional signal.
Alpha is at its cap. They already have 5 FMs in the San Francisco Market which is what would be counted for ownership. KKDV, KKIQ, KUIC, KBAY and KEZR. San Jose is a subset of San Francisco.
I know KUIC may be linked to KKDV and KKIQ, but I believe Vacaville is part of the Sacramento DMA? I know Solano (save for Vallejo, etc) isn't really frequently considered to be the Bay Area, though some Bay Area commuters have moved into Fairfield/Vacaville for relatively low cost of housing.Thanks. I forgot KKDV and KKIQ counted toward the market cap.