But they are back in the more normal range. It looks like January was an anomaly. CBS-FM has been in the mid-4's to very low 5's range (statistically flat) for every one of the last 6 books except January.Big drop for WCBS-FM
WLTW had an 8.4 last May. It's on the high end of their average, but not out of the ordinary for them.Has it been a while since any station in this market has reached Lite FM's 8.4 overall rating, outside of the Xmas season?
What separates each station are the songs they play that the other does not play.They’re going to have to do something soon with 94.7. As silly as it sounds, 101.1 and 94.7 could start cannibalizing each other in the ratings as many of the songs WCBS FM will soon get into will be the same songs on the block
What separates each station are the songs they play that the other does not play.
Maybe actually it's just that everything else is tanking. Hip hop listeners are streaming and other younger listeners continue to migrate from fm so Seems like many formats that were at the top are now shockingly lowPerhaps WNYC is doing so well because it/NPR offers programming that is not easily found on streaming services, and doesn't run annoying commercials.
radioinsight.com
Doesn't matter how young or old you are, it's all the same.
Increasingly, it seems there is little difference between the oldest demo (25-54), the youngest demo (18-34) and the middle (18-49). In all three, although in slightly different order, you find Lite-FM, Z100, Q104.3, WKTU and WSKQ, with WCBS-FM right behind. Doesn't matter how young or old you are, it's all the same.
It wasn't long ago that Top 40, Urban and Album Rock stations would dominate the younger demos. The older ones would listen to AC, Urban AC, Classic Hits and Classic Rock. Z100, Kiss-FM and WPLJ were the big 18-34 stations. And we'd see Lite-FM, WCBS-FM and WBLS at the top in the 25-54 demo.
The music found on the remaining commercial pop stations is pretty homogenous. And again, young people are listening to their own music on their phones, YouTube, games, online. Not radio.
They are listening to radio. They’re listening to different forms of it. Can someone explain to me why radio companies can’t profit off selling online stream (Audacy/IHeart app) numbers again?Younger people typically don't use radio. Their PPM meters are likely hearing stations being used by older people in their vicinity.
Album rock stations their modern-day equivalent, Alternative, are gone. The music found on the remaining commercial pop stations is pretty homogenous. And again, young people are listening to their own music on their phones, YouTube, games, online. Not radio.
Can someone explain to me why radio companies can’t profit off selling online stream (Audacy/IHeart app) numbers again?
Is Audacy Happy with WCBS FM’s Morning show ? To me there is very little reason to listen to it.Now we can all see what you're talking about:
https://ratings.****************/content/arb001
Big drop for WCBS-FM