Are radio subchannels a way to appease listeners? Seems like it's terrestrial radio's answer to streaming.
I hope Star flips back and 98.9 becomes Hip Hop. A major city in America in 2023 should have Hip Hop. Seattle and, Minneapolis, & Pittsburgh lack full market Hip Hop Stations. (The translators in Pittsburgh & Minneapolis don't count.)
KUBE was an epic failure at the end of it's life. I find it hard to imagine that anyone would ever want to try that again knowing what we know now about the format, and how it struggles in Seattle.
I guess the focus group research came back saying the hole in the market is for three Country stations when it could previously not support two? Shrug.
...But then again, someone thought the market could support two AAA stations.
Maybe they would have kept trying if they had any indication that KPLZ wouldn't flip to country (and would continue on the trajectory of lackluster Hot AC ratings). Perhaps Hubbard felt like they could execute a country format better, and didn't want to leave any chance for listeners to adopt 101.5. I guess they (Hubbard) had no choice but to protect themselves, and they have one of the biggest personalities in the format to leverage.They were both AAA only by the broadest definition but they could not have been more different from each other. KEXP is really more of an indie station and nothing else really sounds like it.
KPNW tried a commercial form of AAA with more familiar songs that I believe targeted a different kind of listener than KEXP. From what I heard, there was very little crossover in the music played between the two stations. KPNW probably hoped to draw some listeners from classic rock, and others who had no station in the market that really served their interest.
I thought KPNW would do better than it did considering Seattle's musical reputation but like I said, I'm not in the market. I think the radio landscape with those two AAA's would be vastly more interesting than one with three country stations, though. I'm disappointed they couldn't make it work for whatever reason.
Audacy shut down all of their HD2s in Seattle with the exception of KNDD HD2 which feeds the Channel Q translator at 103.3.Sometimes they do both. Audacy will often put a format on an HD2 and also make it available on their streaming platform.
KPNW's AAA format was dead man walking (to quote a popular Jelly Roll song).Maybe they would have kept trying if they had any indication that KPLZ wouldn't flip to country (and would continue on the trajectory of lackluster Hot AC ratings). Perhaps Hubbard felt like they could execute a country format better, and didn't want to leave any chance for listeners to adopt 101.5. I guess they (Hubbard) had no choice but to protect themselves, and they have one of the biggest personalities in the format to leverage.
For Triple A's it takes years to build some ratings and loyalty, and not instant success.
People who were in the AAA demographic either had already migrated to internet streaming to get their AAA fix, or they simply didn't know about it. That's my guess anyway.I’ve been listening to KEXP a lot recently from out of the market. The times I tried PNW it sounded like a Cities 97 variant of AAA ~ is that why listeners didn’t tune in and the reason why it didn’t have higher ratings? I’m genuinely curious.
People who were in the AAA demographic either had already migrated to internet streaming to get their AAA fix
A lot of the comments I'm seeing on Reddit, Radio Ink, etc. suggest that a number of their listeners had "just discovered it." Who knows what a little marketing would have done for them.
They are also people who watch TV, use social media, probably use YT (where there are ads, including locally targetted ones), read the online Seattle Times (local ads), maybe the Stranger (local ads), use the local TV channels' websites (has local ads), maybe use Nextdoor Neighborhood (many local ads), etc.Like what kind of marketing? They were already working the concert venues, giving away tickets, doing the kind of outreach you'd expect. You don't do a mass advertising campaign when you're aiming at a specific niche. These are people who mostly live in their own silo and aren't really open to traditional marketing. They're fans of the music, not the way they receive it.
Otherwise I see your point. I just think that radio isn't thinking outside the box enough.