According to Radioinsight, price tag is $1.3 million. The owner of WHIN and Hippie Radio is buying the station. Why do I have a sneaking suspicion this could become an Americana. Station? They could use one of WHIN's Translators.
According to Radioinsight, price tag is $1.3 million. The owner of WHIN and Hippie Radio is buying the station. Why do I have a sneaking suspicion this could become anAmericana. Station? They could use one of WHIN's Translators.
Doesn't WMOT do Americana? Why compete with a class C1 non-commercial FM?According to Radioinsight, price tag is $1.3 million. The owner of WHIN and Hippie Radio is buying the station. Why do I have a sneaking suspicion this could become an Americana. Station? They could use one of WHIN's Translators.
That would makes things worse, not better, for either station. WHIN has a stellar signal during the day. Moving them is negligible for day and worse for night. Even if they were not moved, the night signal for 1430 doesn't cover any portion of Sumner County that already gets service from either of the translators. At least WHIN covers Gallatin and portions outside of Gallatin with its night signal. Not to mention that the translators gather a significant portion of listeners of WHIN.I don't see Americana. Station going on 1430, what could happen is WHIN could move from 1010 to 1430 and relocate their transmitter sight from Madison to Gallatin this would give WHIN a substantial power increase with both their daytime and nighttime power.
Ive thought about the Real estate aspect of it. I would love to see him make something of the station. Heck...if he needed a part time jock for it, Id be interested.Welcome aboard this board Murfradiojim. Couple quick comments. Tony Richards appreciates “old school” radio and believes in turnarounds and even AMs. Second, sometimes you can take a failing asset and create creative ways to make it a winning asset. (Although big corps can only file bankruptcy and still go even more broke.) I would also suggest thinking bigger picture on the real estate potential of the acreage in the deal. Towers are just a part of the equation and in today’s world there are options that can make it a great deal. So, instead of seeing a just a radio station that no one would want, think bigger and better. Then again —- is he crazy? LOL. What do I know?
I would also suggest thinking bigger picture on the real estate potential of the acreage in the deal.
radioinsight.com
If memory serves me right, it was the old WJRB.
Before becoming WJRB in 1977, 1430 was WENO which starting in 1957 was Nashville’s first full time country station.Good attitude!! I think you will see something cool come outta the station soon. If memory serves me right, it was the old WJRB. It sure tried to compete with 980, 1240, 1300 and 1510 even though I think it was country. Damn old age.
Man, I missed all those call letters, BigA. Looks like I never tuned in since 1978. I don’t think it had any success since the old WJRB. Could be really off on that. Will have to look all that up.
Before becoming WJRB in 1977, 1430 was WENO which starting in 1957 was Nashville’s first full time country station.
Bill Barry eventually bought it and held it for a while until he sold it to Nashville Public Radio in 2001 for $3 million.
Mack Sanders also owned radio stations in Kansas when I was growing up. Talked to him on the phone one time. Seems like he went to Prison at one point.For a while, it seemed it went through several owners. At least that's what I've read on the assignment applications. It looked like while Mack Sanders was trying to sell the station to avoid bankruptcy, he got at least three different companies to take it over. They never could each filing for bankruptcy themselves. Bill Barry eventually bought it and held it for a while until he sold it to Nashville Public Radio in 2001 for $3 million.