The largest ethnic group in New York City is white.
That doesn't make it a majority.
The largest ethnic group in New York City is white.
No, but it also doesn't make it a group that should be underserved by radio formats in the NYC market.That doesn't make it a majority.
I'm thinking NY Public Radio may be the most likely buyer.
No, but it also doesn't make it a group that should be underserved by radio formats in the NYC market.
The only major "white" format not represented on the NYC radio dial is country, and the reasons for that have been explained over and over again in countless threads. It's frustrating for fans of the genre that stereotyping at ad agencies is part of the problem, but hey, reality bites.They're not underserved. They get the level of service the market can support.
The only major "white" format not represented on the NYC radio dial is country
Those are not sustainable commercial formats in most markets, and they underperform with advertisers because of the slacker/underemployed perception of their listeners. Madison Avenue sharpies think 'active rock" and laugh, picturing Beavis and Butt-head nodding and holding their devil horns high. Noncommercial operators (other than college stations) don't program that music because it doesn't attract donations.That is completely untrue and you know it.
There is no Active Rock station.
There is no Alternative station except on an HD2 channel that is unavailable on most people's radios, and it's just a jockless jukebox.
90% or so of Hispanics (not a race) are "white" per the 2020 Census.The largest ethnic group in New York City is white. The second largest ethnic group in NYC is Hispanic or Latino but they are fragmented into groups from different regions who don't all listen to each other's music.
But the influence of Hispanic and Black and ethnic music in general has influenced the market for decades.No, but it also doesn't make it a group that should be underserved by radio formats in the NYC market.
The country stations in NYC in the last several decades have not rated high enough to get on most buys. It was not the format, it was the under-performance of the station in question. Very few ad campaigns buy 15 deep... of course, many stations have a strong subset of the audience but country is very broad and has no specific narrow demo that made the station "Top 10" in, let's say, 35-44 women or 25-34 men or something very desirable for a campaign.It's frustrating for fans of the genre that stereotyping at ad agencies is part of the problem, but hey, reality bites.
The University of Texas, owner of KUT/Austin, paid $6M in 2012 for KXBT 98.9 FM — relaunched as AAA KUTX.On the public radio side, I'm not aware of a company that spent money buying a station for the AAA format.
In no reality is that happening.No, but it also doesn't make it a group that should be underserved by radio formats in the NYC market.
This is the clearest explanation I’ve seen on this board for advertiser apathy toward Country stations in New York.…many stations have a strong subset of the audience but country is very broad and has no specific narrow demo that made the station "Top 10" in, let's say, 35-44 women or 25-34 men or something very desirable for a campaign.
UT ain't a company, partner. Years ago, they gave me a piece o' paper with some scribblin' on it sayin' I got educated there. Believe it's still just a big ol' school.The University of Texas, owner of KUT/Austin, paid $6M in 2012 for KXBT 98.9 FM — relaunched as AAA KUTX.
Exactly. 🤦♂️“White formats?” 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄
To be accurate, "White non-Hispanic/Latino".The largest ethnic group in New York City is white.
Imagine that.“White formats?” 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄
A slogan like that and people would immediately make a petition to cancel the station's licenseImagine that.
Get ready for "98.7 ARYAN NATION RADIO...where it's all white power, all the time!" 😆😆
There is no mainstream/commercial AAA station. WFUV still serves an older noncomm audience with its folk-heavy mix.