In fairness, it was an oddly tangential bit of nonsense, even considering the track record.
This is, again, the failure to understand the fact that not all stations are driven by ratings. The best example are sports stations that outperform their 12+ ratings by enormous amounts.I have him blocked so I can't even see what he said; I can just see your responses. But can there really be any question that whatever the complaint was, it was about the station airing the Black Information Network. I mean...really, folks? Really?
WPEN-FM's ratings are pretty rough. Not saying a flip is imminent but I have to imagine Beasley's keeping an eye on it the rati
Mostly. Philadelphians are stubborn in their ways and don't like to change much. But Beasley DID launch 98.5 the Sports Hub in Boston and now regularly beat Audacy's WEEI, so it CAN be done. But it's pretty clear the Fanatic ain't going to do it too.
But the fact that sports had huge shares in the market and the merger would give virtually 100% of that audience to a single operator caused both the FCC and the DoJ to "create" a market within a market.The decision on which stations to keep or swap out was more of a deal with the Dept. Of Justice at the time so that none of the parties involved (Entercom, Beasley or iHeart) would have more than 40% of total Boston market revenue.
They had no choice as trying to keep the criteria limited to just the 8-station limit would have prolonged the approval process beyond what anyone wanted.Entercom may have had little choice but to give up The Sports Hub to Beasley - everything is a negotiation.