There have been posts in various threads here over the last 18 months or so that claimed the spot rate for Kuhners show was less than the cost of a cheese pizza
The cheese pizza probably has a higher IQ than most of the on-air callers.
There have been posts in various threads here over the last 18 months or so that claimed the spot rate for Kuhners show was less than the cost of a cheese pizza
My take is that it comes down to perception. WEEI has the "Dad's sports station" reputation. Then add that three of the four main sports have deals with The Sports Hub, and it's the one-two punch.
I actually found it interesting that Audacy thought that Hill was going to be a contender against Toucher & Rich. Didn't T&R's WBCN show beat Hill's WAAF show for the eight months that the two competed against each other? Then didn't T&R on The Sports Hub continue to beat Hill's WAAF show for the 10 following
The answer to his question is literally in the article I linked.The poster's question was about WEEI-FM, not the Sports Hub.
Kirk & Callahan didn't fair much better from my understanding.If Audacy had cared about competing with T&R they wouldn't have torpedoed Kirk & Callahan. They were more concerned with appeasing the Globe and the Red Sox.
K&C were much more competitive against T&R. Greg Hill show has just been a blood bath.Kirk & Callahan didn't fair much better from my understanding.
"That's right, Froggie!" But David Field wanted Magic to complete his "wall of women" portfolio (WODS, WWBX, WMJX).Wasn't WMJX and WWBX direct competitors for many years when Mix 104.1 was owned by CBS?
Not really. There is significant difference between the playlist of each and even in the ethnic composition.Jamin 94.5 Hot 96.9 Kiss 108 and Mix 104.1 are all cannibalizing each other for the 18-34 crowd
I understand and agree with your statement, yet I still view much overlap between CHR and Hot AC as formats. They are not exactly the same, where Hot AC (at least with Mix) has a deeper playlist with older hits than CHR (at least with Kiss). But on a traditional midday or afternoon drive weekday drive, much of the same songs will be played across both stations.Not really. There is significant difference between the playlist of each and even in the ethnic composition.
94.5 is based on hip-hop. 96.9 is Rhythmic AC. Kiss is conventional CHR, and Mix is Hot AC.
All stations share cume with others. The average PPM panelist hears 6 stations in 7 day period, and even more over greater time periods. Even favorite stations change every few weeks for many PPM panelists.
This is like saying "KFC and Pizza Hut are cannibalizing McDonalds". While having more choices may reduce the usage of each brand, it is more likely that, were there fewer options, people would just eat out less. Having a greater variety of quick food options actually increases the usage of the category.
I understand and agree with your statement, yet I still view much overlap between CHR and Hot AC as formats.
This is like saying "KFC and Pizza Hut are cannibalizing McDonalds".
As is Taco Bell. Where I am, KFC and Taco Bell are in the same building, with the menus of both displayed at the drive-thru. I've also seen KFC/Taco Bell/Pizza Hut all-in-one locations elsewhere.To further your example, KFC and Pizza Hut are both owned by the same company.
'As is Taco Bell. Where I am, KFC and Taco Bell are in the same building, with the menus of both displayed at the drive-thru. I've also seen KFC/Taco Bell/Pizza Hut all-in-one locations elsewhere.
I don't debate this. Just that with the case of Mix and Kiss in Boston, that overlap (should it be on the greater side) can siphon listeners from one of the fore mentioned stations. Where with Kiss and Jamin, it's just as you stated. They're both owned by iHeart, thus target different demographics. The overlap won't be as great.It's a function of how much new music you want in your mix. That's the reason why there are different formats. The different formats are aimed at different audiences. They may be in the same age range, but they are different people. So just looking at the 18-34 demo doesn't give you all of the specifics and variations within that demo.
I don't debate this. Just that with the case of Mix and Kiss in Boston, that overlap (should it be on the greater side) can siphon listeners from one of the fore mentioned stations.
Yes, they're will always be overlap. But in the case of Mix and Kiss, Mix to me has a greater advantage with a wider playlist.
That actually does have some merit. Should time change, and that number shrink, and we might see Kiss fade away into something else.Maybe, but they're owned by different companies. They also have different percentages of currents. So that means they have different audiences. The more currents a station plays, usually the younger the audience. Mix has a combination of currents and Gold, so it's an older audience. The fact that they share a few songs is irrelevant.
The key part of that sentence is "to me." Because the fans of Kiss don't care about a wider playlist. They care about hearing their favorite currents, and hearing them whenever they tune in. They're different people from the typical Mix listener.
Now I think that you meant that the original version was by Talk Talk instead.Yet, with Mix, my critique has been that it's the station that plays itself off as it's always been in the know. For example, when No Doubt's remake of "It's my Life" became a hit about 20 years ago, Mix (as Mix 98.5) began to include the original version by The The,