KLIQ Hastings made the switch this morning:
What in the world?
What in the world?
KLIQ Hastings made the switch this morning:
What in the world?
Flood is a shrewd, smart operator and has hired some good people for this too.. this will do well or he wouldnt have made the change.
Where do you think most of the meat you eat is processed, and who's working at those plants?
And a further question is, "when they learn some English, why do they need those stations in Spanish?"Where do you think most of the meat you eat is processed, and who's working at those plants?
The answer to that question is the answer to your question.
There's a huge beef plant in Schuyler, Neb., owned by Cargill. That's 80 miles from Grand Island, but given the terrain of western Nebraska, might the station be heard there?Some things I've been thinking about:
*I don't doubt that people of different ethnicities do process our food, but on a thread about Nebraska, we have some rather odd takes. Although the state is the beef capital of the US, that is still only second to its agricultural industry. Plenty of local farmers there who probably sells directly to the store. Going back to the topic of meat, there is one company, D&D in Washington County, Nebraska, that butchers their own cuts, and they claim that they are "direct to consumer". I'm not one to take anything at face value, but the fact remains that a lot of food is still local to Nebraska. And, respectfully, RDP, assuming that your answer to fybush's question is true, then what does that have to do with Grand Island, or Nebraska?
*The market lost their only "AC" station, with the closest one now being KLIR Columbus. I think KSYZ counts, but apparently one doesn't fill up a hole in one genre without creating a hole in another genre. Again, what should these listeners do? Get a better antenna? Stream? Open up their playlists? Well, obviously streaming is the answer for everything, never mind that data coverage in Nebraska is poor compared to the rest of the US. And while we're talking about Mexicans, my market (Cheyenne) is not even home to a single Mexican station any more. There's 102.1 KGRE in Estes Park, but the signal is hit or miss in Cheyenne, and although 96.5 KXPK delivers a nice signal to Cheyenne, it isn't perfect. Now, 1170 KJJD provides a "usable" signal to my city, but it can be susceptible to RFI noise. Overall though, for Cheyenne, which has 11,000 Hispanics in the city, they don't have terrestrial options. Telling them to "just stream it already" would be quite disrespectful of their culture. And in fact, Cheyenne did have a regional Mexican format on 1630 AM on 94.7 FM, perfectly clear across the city. They lost that format. Hastings/Grabd Island is like that, but for AC, which draws vastly more listeners on a given day.
With that, I should be able to presume that Flood Communications didn't just look at the statistics and say "Hey, the tri-cities really need a Regional Mexican format, because of all those meat processors". Instead, Flood just saw the purchase as an opportunity to push their own product. That is the story all over the US for corporate radio, which we've all come to accept, except for when I come across a nice stream of complaints on this website when someone loses their favorite station(s). Yet, a well known brand is yanked off the air, in America's heartland, and somehow we start talking about meat processing. It's nice to know where that stuff comes from (it should be rather given, because I've seen plenty of items, food or otherwise, say "Hecho en Mexico") however this was a practice in unnecessarily defending the station on the basis that somehow I'm not grateful enough for Mexicans. On a related note, Canadians should invade Vermont's radio stations to remind them who has the most Maple Syrup.
It looks like normal coverage does not reach Schulyer, or even Columbus, but I bet that Nebraska has a lot of tropo in that area, so probably hit or miss.There's a huge beef plant in Schuyler, Neb., owned by Cargill. That's 80 miles from Grand Island, but given the terrain of western Nebraska, might the station be heard there?
Exactly.Oh, and migrant workers from Quebec aren't coming to Vermont to tap trees and boil sap every spring, so no need for French-language radio in Vermont to super-serve them.