• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Alt 92.3 to Become WINS Simulcast

With the limited growth of the KNX brand on FM in LA, I question if the coming 92.3 WINS will grow, or if it's more about sustaining an otherwise declining AM listenership. If it's the latter, I see this as putting duct tape on a hole in a boat. It might lower the leak, but without a longterm fix, it will eventually sink.
Even if it’s sustaining the existing listenship and potentially eventually sinks, if that total sinking is 10 years away that’s almost forever in corporate profits when the market is concerned about daily stock prices and quarterly earnings reports.
 
the Death of radio is in the hands of people who support a flawed system of recording ratings (ppm). so 10 or 20 people in a market x 100 determine where a radio station lives or dies and those 10 or 20 people represent the voice of millions in a market?
That is not true. The PPM is a panel study, and it tries very closely to always mirror age distribution, gender proportions, ethnicity and language usage, education and income and geographic distribution in the metro. It's a miniature version of the market that has all the full market characteristics.

The samples range from about 1000 in the smallest PPM market to nearly 5000 in the largest. That is vastly larger than the political surveys that try to predict the whole country with 1000 to 1200 samples.
Ok. Radio operators who complained about diaries won’t admit the fact their marketing strategies were just poor. so what people wrote down what they only remembered? Those radio stations must’ve done something right, from a marketing and promotions stand point, while the others didn’t.
The diary has several defects:

1. Stations that are listened to less are often not written in.
2. Stations that are heard but not selected by the diarykeeper are often not written in.
3. The panel is a random probability sample, and each week it is different with no guarantees of proportionality.
4. It takes four weeks at least to get diary results back and tabulated, which is a long time.
Ppm is extremely flawed, and radio 5 feet under (nearly 6) because of it.
It is a very accurate system and does better than anything used anywhere else in the world.
Even the company who began ppm was absorbed by Nielsen - for what it’s worth.
Nielsen bought Arbitron so they could get the patents Arbitron owned on the system. When the PPM was being developed, Nielsen was part of it... I know as I was on the industry panel of radio and TV representatives who worked with Nielsen and Arbitron right from the beginning. I saw the first working PPM in about 1996, when it was the size of a pack of cigarettes.
Not trying to stir up drama, I respect everyone’s opinion!!
You don't understand how the meter, the meter panel and the tabulations work.
 
Defensive much? I didn’t realize it’s a sensitive subject. don‘tdiscount what I know. You’d be surprised
I am hardly defensive. I have been on several panels that pushed Arbitron to change some of its systems.

You started out by miss-stating the panel size. You incorrectly stated the relationship with Nielsen in the development of the PPM and then its purchase of Arbitron to get the patented technology.

You don't see the disadvantages of the diary, which I detailed.

I've worked with stations in nearly 20 countries with different ratings systems. Over the years, I have dealt with about 10 ratings services in just the US, with six services in Puerto Rico, three in Mexico, two in Argentina, three in Ecuador and so on in different countries.

I even wrote the data processing software for one of the ratings companies in Puerto Rico and maintained it for a decade. My résumé is linked below. Now it is your turn to present your bona fides.
 
I even wrote the data processing software for one of the ratings companies in Puerto Rico and maintained it for a decade. My résumé is linked below. Now it is your turn to present your bona fides.
what’s your email Mr. David? Will gladly send my resume to you. With my experience, I’m confident I am the guy who could assist you with your radio stations right now. Yes, my passport isn’t as big as yours and my years of service isn’t close to being as long as yours. But, have you sold? Have you climbed a transmitter yourself to a replace a part of a tower? In my latest profession, have you programmed a tv station? Have you covered a Super Bowl, World Series, national championships in all sports and conducted a interview with the president of the United States (and I had the greatest honor of being called by my radio nickname when I interviewed President Trump) , without the help of a photog? Or, some of the top musicians in the world? All of this done under the age of 35? I’m not trying to having a contest. But, you asked me for a resume
 
Last edited:
@ Barry :
Do you, or perhaps someone else here, recall if WKMB 1070 in Stirling New Jersey had any ratings or noteworthy success when they were Country?
True; they were only a wee 250-watt daytimer, but iIrc they had a monopoly in the market for the longest while as C&W. And that would've been before Modern Country and translators.
According to Radio-Locator, the facility still exists.

They had some chimes to get licensed omni with KYW 1060 and WHN 1050. Might even have been able for WHN's sticks to be seen from the top of WKMB's.
 
what’s your email Mr. David?
It's in the link below.
Will gladly send my resume to you. With my experience, I’m confident I am the guy who could assist you with your radio stations right now. Yes, my passport isn’t as big as yours and my years of service isn’t close to being as long as yours. But, have you sold?
I was, in addition to group management, GSM for a station I took from under $1 million a year to $13 million in 7 years in a top 15 market. I was GSM for my own stations, 13 of them, some years before.
Have you climbed a transmitter yourself to a replace a part of a tower?
Old-line transmitters tend to be about 7 feet tall. I don't know how you climb one, but I have built a dozen or so transmitters, both AM and FM, from scratch. I have changed lamps on my own towers and once even rode up a 1000' TV tower. Was briefly the Chief Operator for an AM and 4 FMs in LA.
In my latest profession, have you programmed a TV station?
Not for 65 years. I did not like TV, and avoided it ever since.
Have you covered a Super Bowl, World Series, national championships in all sports and conducted a interview with the president of the United States (and I had the greatest honor of being called by my radio nickname when I interviewed President Trump) , without the help of a photog?
I've met presidents of six countries, done everything in soccer in this Hemisphere except the World Cup. I don't do interviews or on-air work because I am not as good on the air as the talented people I can hire.
Or, some of the top musicians in the world?
I presented Julio Iglesias first song in all Latin America. I owned a record label, I did dozens and dozens and dozens of concerts. My most famous, El Concierto Mayor, broke all Puerto Rico's attendance records and ticket gross records. I won a Martín Fierro in Argentina (their equivalent of the Oscar) for the first Argentine only rock station.
All of this done under the age of 35? I’m not trying to having a contest. But, you asked me for a resume
You said nothing specific. As I said, my year by year specific data with stations and countries is in the link below.
 
izctrl-popcorn.gif
 
@ Barry :
Do you, or perhaps someone else here, recall if WKMB 1070 in Stirling New Jersey had any ratings or noteworthy success when they were Country?
True; they were only a wee 250-watt daytimer, but iIrc they had a monopoly in the market for the longest while as C&W. And that would've been before Modern Country and translators.
According to Radio-Locator, the facility still exists.

They had some chimes to get licensed omni with KYW 1060 and WHN 1050. Might even have been able for WHN's sticks to be seen from the top of WKMB's.
WKMB 1070 am had a deeper playlist than the average Country station. The mom and pop broadcaster had loyal listeners in the small section of the New York metro that could receive its modest signal.
After managing to broadcast Country music for around 23 years (quite a feat in this area!) It was sold about 20 years ago, to a religious broadcaster by the heirs of the original owner. Maybe they figured that it would be difficult for a standalone small daytime only AM station to provide much revenue, among all the clusters owned by major radio corporations.

Very Local Country Station
 
Wouldn't the entire alt listenership be okay with indie/folk rock and indie pop though? Even if some groups wouldn’t have that as their first choice, it doesn't sound like music like Mumford and sons or animal collective would be a deal-breaker for alt listeners. I would think the group of people who "hates hipsters" would likely pass over alternative anyway.
 
Wouldn't the entire alt listenership be okay with indie/folk rock and indie pop though? Even if some groups wouldn’t have that as their first choice, it doesn't sound like music like Mumford and sons or animal collective would be a deal-breaker for alt listeners. I would think the group of people who "hates hipsters" would likely pass over alternative anyway.
I like both types of music on alternative personally.
 
While mornings still lead in revenue, Middays and Afternoons are both more listened to than Mornings now in the PPM markets.

And that was pre-PPM. Were he on today with PPM, I calculate he would have been 8th or 9th in share in both NYC and LA.

Alt has so much fragmentation the only consensus is on decades old songs.
Yes, but doing consensus songs only isn't exactly the way to run things either. It would be like if country stations only played pop country like before he cheats by Carrie underwood or something. It would make for boring radio. They're songs listeners are"okay" with, but don't gravitate towards.
 
Yes, but doing consensus songs only isn't exactly the way to run things either. It would be like if country stations only played pop country like before he cheats by Carrie underwood or something. It would make for boring radio. They're songs listeners are"okay" with, but don't gravitate towards.
All the songs on country radio are consensus songs. The majority of fans of the format currently like songs by Underwood, Luke Combs, Luke Bryan, Sam Hunt, Jon Pardi, Mitchell Tenpenny and Carly Pierce -- all very different artists stylistically, but all of whom are liked by enough listeners that stations routinely play their current hits for upwards of six months before moving on to the next one. Sure, there are listeners who think country radio should be playing less of one kind of country or more of another kind. But the ratings show that a consensus has been attained, and the format is successful.
 
WKMB 1070 am had a deeper playlist than the average Country station. The mom and pop broadcaster had loyal listeners in the small section of the New York metro that could receive its modest signal.
After managing to broadcast Country music for around 23 years (quite a feat in this area!) It was sold about 20 years ago, to a religious broadcaster by the heirs of the original owner. Maybe they figured that it would be difficult for a standalone small daytime only AM station to provide much revenue, among all the clusters owned by major radio corporations.

Very Local Country Station
I had an internship in Morristown in 1992. I can remember there was a lady who listened to WKMB all day. I think it was the last time I regularly heard someone listening to an AM music station in America.
 
Even if it’s sustaining the existing listenship and potentially eventually sinks, if that total sinking is 10 years away that’s almost forever in corporate profits when the market is concerned about daily stock prices and quarterly earnings reports.
That's a great point. I personally tend to be accidentally ignorant to the corporate side of the buisness, and am thinking of it purely from a perspective of station longevity. I actually enjoy newsradio and will still use Audacy's and iHeart's apps to listen to news radio at times. The majority of my listening is now satellite, for music and programming. Just subscribed last month.
 
Yes, but doing consensus songs only isn't exactly the way to run things either. It would be like if country stations only played pop country like before he cheats by Carrie underwood or something. It would make for boring radio. They're songs listeners are"okay" with, but don't gravitate towards.
Otherwise, most currents are polarized at least a couple of ways.... one group loves them, one tolerates them and the third group hates them. With a few exceptions for "universal" hits, almost all alternative music of the last 12 to 15 years is that way. The songs with big passion scores are older than that.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom