Near north Chicago suburbs days: nothing but WCPT splatter. At. Night WGY but not as strong as it used to be. I’ve heard WHB occasionally. When I’m out west it’s KGO up and down the coast at night.
At least every minute of the station's time is bought and paid for. Try another format on that frequency and see if you can make the same claim.Truly a waste of a great station to run a sports betting format.
I'm inclined to agree. But management might somehow find it within them to console themselves about it if it becomes a cash cow. 🤣Truly a waste of a great station to run a sports betting format.
One of several Kansas City-area nighttime figure-8 patterns...including 810 KCMO, which downgraded from 10 to 5 kw in 1979 to loosen the nulls that just happened to be over the fastest-growing parts of the Kansas CIty metro!I still have trouble thinking of WHB as being on 810k, myself. In college in southeast Iowa, I spent a lot of time listening to the "Worlds Happiest Broadcasters" in those days when it was on 710. KCMO was on 810 at that time, and each of them had a fair signal, Each of them also vanished at sunset. My then-girlfriend lived in northwest Iowa, and WHB (on 710) there was solid 24/7. KCMO (on 810) was good daytime, not so much at night.
I've spent a few nights in Columbia, as well as in Higginsville, Mo, which is 50 miles east of KC. Both stations at night invisible there. In Higginsville, 810 at night (as KCMO) was pretty much spent. 710 (as WHB) was still listenable although with lots of fading after sunset.I found some notes regarding other stations picked up on 810 in the 1980s in Columbia, Missouri (which is east of Kansas City and thus doesn't get anything from KCMO/WHB
CKJS had a nice day signal, ut effectively was gone at night before the U.S. border. Format. IIRC was similar to CFAM (950). Mostly religion and brokered stuff. I seem to also remember some country music as well.CKJS Winnipeg, Manitoba! - got it for a full half hour just before midnight on November 23, 1984. There was no station ID, just a time announcement, classical music, and top of the hour news from "Broadcast News". CKJS was my best guess (at least in 1984).
Both 710 and 810 are impossible in Columbia, about 125 miles east of Kansas City. 610 is fine and even 980, at least on the old antenna system in Westwood, Kansas, could be heard with not much fading. KMBZ was directional toward the west at night but not very directional, obviously.I've spent a few nights in Columbia, as well as in Higginsville, Mo, which is 50 miles east of KC. Both stations at night invisible there. In Higginsville, 810 at night (as KCMO) was pretty much spent. 710 (as WHB) was still listenable although with lots of fading after sunset.
Agreed, but it won't. It's a milk dud at best. Cumulus owns four AM stations in the SFBA market. (Aside from KGO, 560/KSFO, 680/KNBR and 1050/KTCT.) And the statement "four AM's in the same market" should be stating the obvious. KTCT does nothing in the ratings, and a sports betting format would have fit it just as well, with the mighty KGO signal getting used for something, anything (excuse my choice of word) better. In fact, even if they'd moved the right-wing talk from KSFO to KGO and put the sports betting on the 560 signal, IMO it would have been preferable.I'm inclined to agree. But management might somehow find it within them to console themselves about it if it becomes a cash cow. 🤣
Where?Nothing during the day for me on 810. Nights, sometimes WGY. Often nothing. I too am surprised by the weakness of WGY in this part of the country
That would have been a tricky transition to pull off: the day when radio stations could shift frequencies, and listeners would follow, seems to be over. The one exception might be migration from an AM to an FM signal. That's not a good option for Cumulus in the SF market except for implementing an HD additional channel, which Cumulus has in fact done, with KSFO being simulcast on KSAN-HD2.I agree that 560 and 810 should have reconsidered. This 24/7/52 casino stuff has yet to prove it has a place in the ratings. In fact, they appear not to be concerned with ratings in the least. It's too late now (for the time being) but the thought here is put the roulette wheel and Lost Wages stuff on 560, and put the similarly sold out, if whorish, N/T on the bigger 810.
Remember, the San Francisco Metro Survey Area runs from Santa Rosa down to Gilroy. You'd need a dozen average translators to even cover the bulk of it.As for KGO, I agree it's a shame and a waste of a once-great station, but that's life. I guess they were just stuck. To set up FM simulcast operations that would serve their market sufficiently, they would probably need a bunch of small translators around the Bay Area in an already crowded band.
A lot of stations are resorting to formats that do not depend on ratings. That applies to all the religious and Asian language stations in San Francisco as well as formats that appeal to specific interest groups, like gambling.And put what format on them exactly? KGO as a talker wasn't killing it on AM, don't know that they'd be any more of a hit on FM. I understand that this betting stuff is finding advertisers but I don't really expect KGO per se to be long for this world. What amount could the station be sold for? Whatever, David Eduardo has probably explained all this already, lol.
BBR is definitely not for everyone. It's an acquired taste. But it also offers a lot of solid financial and investing information alongside the expert interviews. One does not need to be a Bloomberg subscriber, or lease a Bloomberg terminal, to learn a lot, or come across actionable information from WBBR, KNEW* or the other BBR repeaters around the country.Look at Bloomberg Business Radio. No ratings, or maybe a 0.1 share. But it is a brand enhancement to remind business folks who use the terminals how valuable having Bloomberg is. This works when a single terminal is about $30 thousand a year!