Also remember throughout May we had the Cavs playoff run as wellCleveland Radio May 24 Ratings
Same numbers for the top 3 stations. I don't recall seeing that before.
WKSU coming back to earth.
WTAM & WMMS continuing to get a boost from Guardians.
Anyway, dominantly older demos driving the ratings. Generally speaking, young people don't listen to the radio for music.
“It all feels forgettable,” says Chris Antonacci, a 31-year-old Katy Perry and Rihanna fan. “None of these releases”—including his personal favorite, Grande’s “Eternal Sunshine,” which spawned two No. 1 hits—“have been cultural moments.”
Oops, I forgot about them. Thanks.Also remember throughout May we had the Cavs playoff run as well.
WKSU also took a noticeable hit as well...still say the bad publicity/flak they got over their liberal bias is hurting them.
The irony is that NPR is currently taking flak from BOTH sides. Conservatives claim liberal bias, and liberals say that NPR is caving to conservative pressure.
I wouldn't read much into WKSU going from #5 to #9. That seems to be a not-unusual wobble.WKSU also took a noticeable hit as well...still say the bad publicity/flak they got over their liberal bias is hurting them.
Looking at the ratings, is IPM ever going to admit that the move to put WCLV on that big 90.3 signal is a failed experiment? CLV numbers are where they have always been,
If an NPR show does a profile of an African-American jazz artist or looks at alcohol abuse on Indian reservations or studies the number of shootings at schools, is that liberal? Or would conservatives simply view those things as liberal?
Actually Big A, normally I would agree with what you say...but if you listen to WCLV pledge campaigns, they really struggle...Don't you think there's a reason the station was donated to IPM?Keep in mind that non-commercial radio isn't driven by ratings, but subscribers. The classical music audience may be small, but they support the station with donations that make the size of the signal important. WCLV is a heritage Cleveland institution.
Actually Big A, normally I would agree with what you say...but if you listen to WCLV pledge campaigns, they really struggle...Don't you think there's a reason the station was donated to IPM?
you are right on all counts...I'm just saying IPM management for years contended that the poor signal at 104.9 impeded their ability to attract listeners and thus increase pledge dollars...now they have a great signal and nothing has changed. It just seems to be a very big signal to use for a station with a tiny audience...but I completely hear what you are saying.Because they wanted to retain the classical format. This was a way to do it. Several other heritage commercial classical stations did the same thing around the country at the same time. The classical format is now mostly non-commercial. So yes it's a struggle getting people to donate money for radio. Dozens of NPR stations around the country are laying off staff because fundraising isn't meeting expectations. So this isn't a problem that's unique to WCLV or Cleveland.
Are you implying radio folks have an excuse for every scenario?you are right on all counts...I'm just saying IPM management for years contended that the poor signal at 104.9 impeded their ability to attract listeners and thus increase pledge dollars...now they have a great signal and nothing has changed. It just seems to be a very big signal to use for a station with a tiny audience...but I completely hear what you are saying.
Unless there is further loss in the next books, that wobble of a point at that level is likely more due to sample variations than anything else.Going from #5 to #9 isn't the issue (as that can be separated by very small margins) as much as going from a 6.5 to 5.5 rating. You lose a whole point in 1 book, that says something.
Years ago (2010-2011?) they publicly released 6+ ratings for all stations, including all non-comms. I think that was an effort to garner new subscribers.Does anybody see a full report these days? All stations, not just those that subscribe?
I think that having a strong signal for a Classical music station can be important, listening-wise. Given that there are a number of low-level, soft passages in the music, the strong signal will help the station have a bigger audio footprint, over a larger area, so radio listeners won't have to deal with, even small, noises associated with weak signals. On other music stations, the music is consistently loud enough to cover up some of the really soft, low-level noise that might occur.you are right on all counts...I'm just saying IPM management for years contended that the poor signal at 104.9 impeded their ability to attract listeners and thus increase pledge dollars...now they have a great signal and nothing has changed. It just seems to be a very big signal to use for a station with a tiny audience...but I completely hear what you are saying.