95.7 will be simulcast there.Anyone here believe Jack will be upgraded to 107.3?
95.7 will be simulcast there.Anyone here believe Jack will be upgraded to 107.3?
If this is true I’m glad they aren’t switching 95.7’s format.95.7 will be simulcast there.
Hmm, don't you think that would cannibalize the fox?
Still seems strange to do a total 180 on the playlist with zero overlap whatsoever. I remember when Jack went to alt, it felt at least slightly familiar due to a few alt acts on the station (Muse, Franz Ferdinand, The Killers), and likewise alt to heavier rock (Green Day, Nirvana, Stone Temple Pilots.) 99.7 Gen X going to the Point in 2011 advertised people could still hear gen X artists alongside newer Hot AC artists. But this has no overlap whatsoever.The number of AQH listeners generated by The X was probably too small to matter in the grand scheme of things.
I think ultimately it comes down to them believing the audience for X is negligible. Meaning it doesn’t matter. They’ve made a full genre shift here. It speaks to their view of the market.Still seems strange to do a total 180 on the playlist with zero overlap whatsoever. I remember when Jack went to alt, it felt at least slightly familiar due to a few alt acts on the station (Muse, Franz Ferdinand, The Killers), and likewise alt to heavier rock (Green Day, Nirvana, Stone Temple Pilots.) 99.7 Gen X going to the Point in 2011 advertised people could still hear gen X artists alongside newer Hot AC artists. But this has no overlap whatsoever.
If Jack went to full power moving it to 107.3 would be a smart move, it wouldn’t overlap as bad with 98.5 Jack in Topeka.When Jack was on 105.1, seems like it did more damage to 94.9 KCMO than it did the Fox.
Your point, though, remains. Jack on a full-power stick is more likely to damage other Cumulus properties than it is much of anyone else's.
If they do simulcast 95.7, what’s the reasoning?
Jack is also on 102.5 in KCIf Jack went to full power moving it to 107.3 would be a smart move, it wouldn’t overlap as bad with 98.5 Jack in Topeka.
Separate owners, separate markets. Doesn’t matter if Jack were to be placed on 95.7 (which it won’t be anyway).If Jack went to full power moving it to 107.3 would be a smart move, it wouldn’t overlap as bad with 98.5 Jack in Topeka.
I liked the X and its positioning in the market and usually listened to it instead of either one, but those two are just too strong in the market (at times KRBZ is not though), so most did not listen to the X.In all this, it doesn’t appear KC is hurting for options on the alternative or rock side. With 96.5 and 98.9 still covering this audience. Both of those stations will have some obvious overlap too.
I listened to it, I even remember when 107.3 was “The X“ in the mid 90sI liked the X and its positioning in the market and usually listened to it instead of either one, but those two are just too strong in the market (at times KRBZ is not though), so most did not listen to the X.
If they do simulcast 95.7, what’s the reasoning?
I believe that one of the reasons that KCHZ doesn't have the same coverage area as the other KC FM radio stations is because they are having to protect the signal of KWWR in Mexico, MO, which is also on 95.7FM.Neither 95.7 nor 107.3 individually covers the entire MSA. Together they do, or at least they come very close.
I believe that one of the reasons that KCHZ doesn't have the same coverage area as the other KC FM radio stations is because they are having to protect the signal of KWWR in Mexico, MO, which is also on 95.7FM.
In Carrollton, MO I can usually get all of the full power KC FM stations, except for KCHZ.
I have to wonder whether adding 107.3 to KCHZs coverage would make much of a difference as I assume this would be done to try to improve their lower ratings? The 60dbu gets to the east side of KC which I know with urban area and topography does make matter in KCs case as things are rough over there. I just question whether that’s the real problem with KCHZ.
To your last part, I totally see your point but it seems like if it isn’t that appealing where the signal is stronger as compared to say 93.3, then areas to the east may not be likely to be much different.That's likely part of it. In the late 90's, KWWR made a small move so 95.5 Bethalto, IL could move its tower to Spanish Lake and cover St. Louis better. That, however, wouldn't help KCHZ as it moved its transmitter a few miles west from Mexico proper to the Centralia area just north of the Boone/Audrain County line. KCHZ is also licensed to Ottawa, and it can't move much further east and still put a city grade signal over Ottawa.
Guessing you can get 107.3 pretty easily there. Before it moved transmitter sites a few years ago, I could get it in Columbia on my car radio. I go to Carrollton once- or twice-a-year to check out the River Bottoms Brewery downtown. Plus, I can get a Ken's pizza from the Marshall Mazzio's on the way back home. Growing up in Texas and Oklahoma, Ken's pizza is an absolute must have once-in-awhile. Never really have checked out the radio much on those visits to Carrollton, though. If it's during football season, I usually either have KCMQ or WDAF on for the Chiefs, but, otherwise, I'm either streaming or listening to satellite radio. I drive through Malta Bend on my way there, and I've always thought it was funny that a town that's pretty much just an intersection or two has a radio station licensed to it.
I've wondered that, too. KCHZ got numbers close to what Mix is getting now around 2010-11. That tends to make me think the signal isn't that big of a barrier. Of course, the other side to that is that people in Independence, Lee's Summit, and Blue Springs don't likely listen to the station at all. When you think about how many people live in those areas while working in Overland Park, KS (and it used to be quite a large number), most of those people won't listen to KCHZ at work either unless a co-worker chooses the station. People tend to like consistency, and they don't usually listen to stations at work that they can't hear at home. The other side to that, though, is that people won't work to enjoy radio. I'm not sure that would be a huge problem, though, if 95.7 and 107.3 were to simulcast as you can hear 107.3 quite well in most of Johnson County. Someone from Blue Springs could keep the radio on 107.3 in the car and have it on 95.7 on the clock radio in the office. Dial flipping wouldn't be needed once the office radio was set.
The KWWR tower is also where it is to avoid being under the jurisdiction of Boone County Planning & Zoning, which is notoriously hostile to tall towers - and it was also a taller tower than the previous one, allowing KWWR to have full class C status. It probably also helped KWWR in its longstanding competition with Moberly's KRES for ag ad dollars.That's likely part of it. In the late 90's, KWWR made a small move so 95.5 Bethalto, IL could move its tower to Spanish Lake and cover St. Louis better. That, however, wouldn't help KCHZ as it moved its transmitter a few miles west from Mexico proper to the Centralia area just north of the Boone/Audrain County line. KCHZ is also licensed to Ottawa, and it can't move much further east and still put a city grade signal over Ottawa.
To your last part, I totally see your point but it seems like if it isn’t that appealing where the signal is stronger as compared to say 93.3, then areas to the east may not be likely to be much different.
Speaking bluntly I think it’s just the Vibes programming isn’t as appealing or the way it’s presented. But obviously I could be wrong and maybe people east of KC would find it more interesting.
I also don’t know if the car radio, work radio/clock radio thing is much of a phenomenon anymore as if someone can hear it in the car but not at work, they will simply stream it.
KCHZ was originally KOFO-FM (I fervently hoped that the station would have adopted the slogan "KOFO is a MOFO") and had various difficulties over the years. Briefly in the 1990s, it tried to do a soft AC format as "Total Radio" (KZTO) with offices and studios in Lawrence, and then was off the air for more than three years. I could occasionally pick up KWWR at my Kansas City house during those years. I'll admit that I had an outdoor FM antenna in those days.