Radio Insight is reporting that there may be big changes in Chicago radio this week. Any ideas what they might be? April Fools?
If that happens, it will be on 98.7 WDZH, no question.In Detroit, it has long been speculated that one of the lower performing Audacy FMs will become WWJ-FM.
The FCC did not downgrade the clears. By the early 70’s there was essentially no listening to radio at night when the clears Gad their big coverage, and the FCC kept them amply protected out hundreds of miles, despite the proliferation of smaller local station everywhere.It makes me wonder if this downgrading of AMs is catching up to the FCC's downgrade of clear channels back in the 70s.
No, it did not. There was no listening to stations 1000 miles away from the 26 Class A clears, so they lost nothing. And their daytime coverage was totally unaffected.That led to a rise of small AMs chipping away at the clear channel signals, and lowering their overall status.
The FCC did not downgrade the clears.
No, it did not.
In May 29, 1980, they limited their signal protection:
It paved the way for 125 new AMs. From your website:
Except for a few trucker shows in overnights, nobody has sold outside the daytime ground wave coverage area since the 80’s and, maybe, early 90’s. So nobody was making any money from out of market signals except for some agricultural formats in the Midwest and that was daytime coverage and not on more than one or two of the real clears… WNAX, not WHO.What I'm really saying is that Audacy is likely finding it harder to sit on valuable tower real estate for AM stations that simply make less money than they used to. If they only sell 100 miles out, then they don't need to own all that land, or worry about tower location and height any more. Just do the bare minimum to keep them on the air, while moving the content to FM and online.
And many of those urban locations are for lower power regional channels such as KABC or WMAL whic wer closer to their city of license.Selling tower land to a tower company won't make as much money as selling tower land to a developer, as Cumulus did in LA & DC. I recently drove past the former KABC tower site on LaCienega, and the change in that neighborhood is significant.
Except for a few trucker shows in overnights, nobody has sold outside the daytime ground wave coverage area since the 80’s and, maybe, early 90’s. So nobody was making any money from out of market signals
Yet how many of those 1-A and B stations served rural areas since when TV took over by the mid 50’s? There was little or no revenue and agencies bought markets, not regions.. The other Directional Class I-Bs got a boost toward some areas, giving them close to a City Grade signals in areas closer to the transmitter, around 200-300 miles. Those stations are STILL the only ones with anywhere near true full service to rural areas. FM stations are often jukeboxes with little or no news and weather reports. There are also some former Class II stations and former Class III stations with high power that have usable skywave service.
A perfect case is the 720 AM in Las Vegas. Originally 50 kw, directional. Then cut to lower power. Then is about to turn in the license and is off the air.Many of those 125 new AM stations are already deleted, off the air on silent STA, or in serious financial trouble, even more than previously existing stations. Even many FMs are forced to be in underpopulated areas by anticompetitive First Local Service rules and dubious case law, even where they technically can be moved to serve a much larger population, and the alleged Communities of License are nearly non existent and are already covered by many other City Grade signals.
It bills more than WBMX, a decent FM... or more than WPPN, WFMT or iHeart's WCHI. Just because a station is not in the top two or three in ratings does not mean they can't be nicely profitable. This is a business, not a horse race.Just out of curiosity is the tower land for WLS worth a lot as well? That's for sure a station which has pretty much outlived it's 50,000 watt usefulness.