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I was wrong!

It would be nice to know how many listeners WSM has. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but it is the US's last 50kw clear channel music station.
Not just over the air but how many listen to their streams as well. They have air talent and a good playlist and I wonder how they would do with a FM translator. I know that Gaylord just uses them to promote the Opry but I would be curious to see how they can do.
 
As I posted in another thread, I was told by someone on the inside that the online streams exceed the on-air listening, which is why they've discontinued with Nielsen. They see themselves primarily as an online radio station.
There is a lot of expenses keeping full-power AM on the air. They could easily sell it or shut it down and keep their online listeners.
 
As I posted in another thread, I was told by someone on the inside that the online streams exceed the on-air listening, which is why they've discontinued with Nielsen. They see themselves primarily as an online radio station.
That makes sense. I belong to a few Facebook groups devoted to country stars of the '80s and '90s, and every time one of those veteran acts is scheduled to appear on the Opry, you can count on links to the webcast on WSM being posted over and over as the date grows near.
 
There is a lot of expenses keeping full-power AM on the air.
Figure somewhere in the $0.12 an hour electric rate (they are in the TVA area, right?) so that is $12 an hour or $300 a day or $9,000 a month, including A/C, tower lights and the rest of the site needs. Amortization on a recent 50 kw transmitter might be around $2,000 a month.

At any power they need an engineer, a transmitter site, etc. The station is guessed to bill about $50 thousand a month, so the tech costs are covered. The issue is more about how big the history of WSM (AM) is to the Opry.

Give it a decade or two more.

(As reference, the highest market biller does about $200 thousand a month)
 
They probably get more listens over the air in rural areas than in Nashville. It has popped up on other books.
 
My mother still listens to WSM over the air, but that was mainly because my dad did, and apparently for no other reason. She will be 85 in a couple of months.

We watched "Coffee, country, and Cody" many mornings while we were at home due to the pandemic. But almost none since then. (Noticing even then that they were promoting younger upcoming performers, and not their established stars, although they played a few of them, as well.)
 
It's the nostalgia gig and old school marketing that keeps the connection. IF it was only an "online station" it would fail sooner than without the "marketing" of the station. You walk by the station in Opryland Hotel. That's a ton of eyes and it translates to listeners. The majority find it online. Then the presence on the stage and on TV and downtown Nashville signage drives more branding. There is some local advertising. I would venture to say less than $50k on average now, David. Pull about $12k to $18k off that in lean months. BigA, I fully would expect a plan to located a physical studio to downtown Nashville in the next year to try to bring the station into this decade as The Wildhorse "repurposes" and 2nd Ave gets the makeover after the horrific bombing. No clue if that will all materialize. I would think properly done, the merchandise could bring in $100,000 a year or more.
 
I fully would expect a plan to located a physical studio to downtown Nashville in the next year to try to bring the station into this decade as The Wildhorse "repurposes" and 2nd Ave gets the makeover after the horrific bombing.
That would be cool. Do you have the $$$ to pull that off? It would really be cool to maintain the Opryland hotel location while also having a presence downtown. I remember that a station in west TN tried to pull off something like that back in the '80s, with studios in two separate towns down there. But I don't think that it ever worked out for them.
 
That would be cool. Do you have the $$$ to pull that off? It would really be cool to maintain the Opryland hotel location while also having a presence downtown. I remember that a station in west TN tried to pull off something like that back in the '80s, with studios in two separate towns down there. But I don't think that it ever worked out for them.
What station was that?
 
The one in Trenton which tried to (also) have a studio in downtown Dyersburg. It only lasted for about 15 minutes, if that, so if you don't remember it, that would be understandable.
That would have been WTNE 97.5 (Now WYJJ 97.7) and was the one I had thought it might be. I worked at a hardware store a few doors down at that time and like you said it didn't last long.
 
Back to the original topic of the thread. Y'all falls back to a 1.5 while WSM-FM sees gains.

That's a huge swing. Makes me wonder about the December numbers. Also I've heard that Christmas stations sometimes draw listeners from country stations. So we'll see if things stabilize for January.
 
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