Well there is Ideastream, which has both WKSU and WCLV under its banner, the local consortium that runs WCCR 1260 The Rock, and all the college stations.I guess the only other local radio operator in the area is Rubber City.
Thanks for sharing. Dennis Prager is 'kind of a professor' as he has the active "PragerU" website which, each week, adds a new short, easy-to-take, 5 minute video that focuses on America, Americanism, freedom, plus better ways to proceed on a variety of issues. Most of the videos are not hosted by him. I've donated to "PragerU". Listening to his radio show, I've learned a fair amount about Israel from Dennis that I, otherwise, would not have known. I don't perceive Mr. Prager as "believing his own f's". He is a deep thinker, sophisticated and serious, yet he has a focus on the importance of happiness (Fridays 1:06-2pm). He doesn't insult callers. It's ok for you not to enjoy his show, particularly if you've given it a fair chance recently. However, I think he is the best radio talk show host, by far, that there is today. He comes up with takes that no one else comes up with.Franz is entertaining. Mike Gallagher (on the network) is fine. But Dennis Prager's become one of these guys who started believing his own farts, thinking he's some kind of professor instead of just a radio DJ. I remember him from his days at WABC/New York, and he was much more easier to listen to.
Even if they had kept the Music of Your Life affiliation and associated playlists, it would not have solved the many problems WRMR faced ratings-wise. They were in the basement of the 25-54 demo throughout the 1990s despite repeated impressive showings in the 12+ topline; WDOK was the real breadwinner all along. Conrad cannot be faulted for taking 1420 AM in the direction they did, as it worked for WCLV in the classical field. It just didn't work out.I guess the only other local radio operator in the area is Rubber City.
The old WRMR on 850 must have been paying the bills. Conrad ruined it on 1420 by switching to "classic pops", a steady diet of Sinatra, Tony Bennett and show tunes. I once heard 3 Sinatra songs in 90 minutes.
I'd say so; they might have some assorted Salem-produced talk programming left on the schedule but it's very minimal and in fringe time slots. (For interests of disclosure, I personally know one of the hosts who leases airtime on WHKW.)I think WHKW probably bills more since it's all leased-access programming?
The problem with 1420 (along with 1260 and 1300) is that the night signal much to the east of University Heights is dreadful. Of course, when they were built at their current levels after WW II, the "well to do" had a long country drive out to The Mayfield Club and kids going to Hawken in Lyndhurst had a 45 minute drive from Shaker Heights... so there as no real need for a bigger signal.I'm still mad at Robert Conrad for selling 1420 to Salem. Could he not find someone local?
Even in 1950, the Akron Beacon Journal criticized WERE's signal when they picked up the Cleveland Indians rights and all but pressured WAKR to become an affiliate the following year.The problem with 1420 (along with 1260 and 1300) is that the night signal much to the east of University Heights is dreadful. Of course, when they were built at their current levels after WW II, the "well to do" had a long country drive out to The Mayfield Club and kids going to Hawken in Lyndhurst had a 45 minute drive from Shaker Heights... so there as no real need for a bigger signal.
I have no respect for Mike Gallagher after I heard a show that he did a few years ago after the Dixie Chicks' anti-Bush remarks. He played a tape of a statement by Natalie Maines defending the remark and dubbed in her giggling from some other recording unrelated to the statement. Then accused her of giggling through the statement. I heard the statement on two other sources and there were no giggles. Shameful.Franz is entertaining. Mike Gallagher (on the network) is fine. But Dennis Prager's become one of these guys who started believing his own farts, thinking he's some kind of professor instead of just a radio DJ. I remember him from his days at WABC/New York, and he was much more easier to listen to.
Of note: WKSU has applied for two, on-channel (89.7) boosters to get into parts of Cleveland better. One will cover the East side (I think from the Fish tower) and the other will shoot north from (I believe) one of the Cleveland TV towers.Well there is Ideastream, which has both WKSU and WCLV under its banner, the local consortium that runs WCCR 1260 The Rock, and all the college stations.
But overall, the Cleveland market is basically in national hands:
iHeart has 7 stations (WTAM, WARF, WAKS, WGAR, WMMS, WMJI, WHLK)
Audacy has 4 (WKRK, WNCX, WDOK, WQAL )
Urban One has 4 (WJMO, WERE, WZAK, WENZ)
Salem has 3 (WHKW, WHK, WFHM)
Good Karma has 1 (WKNR...not counting the ghost of WWGK 1540)
Moody Radio has 1 (WCRF)
That's 20 stations owned by 6 national companies
Now if you stretch things out a bit, we have some local ownership:
Rubber City has 3 stations (WAKR, WQMX, and WONE), along with the Klaus family owned WNIR which are all Akron market stations. Elyria/Lorain Broadcasting with WEOL, and the Tollett family who owns WDLW and WOBL all focus on Lorain County, and Spirit Broadcasting, which runs the Lake County focused WINT 1330
The second booster was activated last week and is transmitting from the WKYC tower. I noticed considerable improvement in reception while driving on I-90 east of Clague.Of note: WKSU has applied for two, on-channel (89.7) boosters to get into parts of Cleveland better. One will cover the East side (I think from the Fish tower) and the other will shoot north from (I believe) one of the Cleveland TV towers.
radioink.com
WHK goes directional at night so you end up with this mushroom:I know their nighttime signal is not very good. On the west side at night, it sounds like an out-of-town station.
The guy who does the sports talk show on Sunday night needs to upgrade his equipment. He is hard to understand at times. Maybe he does the show from his basement.

OK. With areas like Berea, Middleburg Heights, North Olmsted, and Strongsville in the main part of the signal, there still is other station interference, sometimes alarmingly so at night.
Strange. I was well within their signal pattern back when they were stereo AM playing oldies. They were always fading in and out with other stations.
850’s night pattern is essentially unchanged from the early 1940s when WJW was moved up north from Akron (the rebuilding of the tower site in 1998–99 kept the same signal strength but with a minimal power reduction to 4,700 watts). It’s directional to protect KOA and first-adjacents WHAS and CJBC but somehow manages to cover much of Cuyahoga County. Suburbs are out of luck, however.The original switch of WKNR to 850 was always baffling to me. Yeah you can pick up 850 during the day in Columbus but was it really that much better of a signal to have than 1220? 850 at night is dreadful.