• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

The True Oldies Channel has returned to HD

The True Oldies Channel can now be heard on 92.3 WINS-FM HD3. It replaces Channel Q, which can still be heard on 102.7 WNEW-FM HD3.
 
How is the quality of the HD3? I know the bit rate is usually lower on 3 than on HD2
If you listen to the YT clips, they're playing the Oldies Channel on the HD3.

I sometimes listen to an HD3 on a local station here in Seattle that plays oldies & standards, playing their sister AM station (KIXI 880, 106.9 HD3). It sounds OK. For room listening, it's allright. The KING-FM Christmas Classical Music channel is an HD3, it also sounds OK.

I suppose if you compared them directly with an HD1 you'd notice a difference, but you'd have to listen for it. Most uses, it works.
 
How is the quality of the HD3? I know the bit rate is usually lower on 3 than on HD2
You can assign different bit rates to the different HD channels. In theory HD 3 could have a higher bit rate than HD 2. Especially if a HD channel is leased to feed a FM Translator and the tenant doesn't "direct wire" the translator.
 
Yes! Thank you for bringing The True Oldies Channel back in New York City for now. Thanks a lot.
And, as you know, The True Oldies Channel (TOC) is hosted by none other than the legendary Scott Shannon, who recently retired from WCBS-FM 101.1

Now he can devote his full efforts to the TOC, and I've noticed the improvement. I've been a long-time listener to the TOC, since it's the best place to hear 60s/70s, with almost no 80s, tunes, although he does occasionally bring in a 50s tune.
 
Much as I like Shannon, I wonder what his plan is long term, as the audience (literally) dies off.

He is in that demo. He should be good financially so he can play what he wants and not worry about "money demos". Streaming stations don't come with legacy debt, tower rent, and other OTA expensives.

It's not entirely his decision to make. He is still dependent on distribution to terrestrial stations by USRN, and if they decide the revenue isn't enough to keep the expense ... well ... I hope for his sake that being a streamer is going to be enough for him.
 
I have always wondered why someone hasn't figured out how record 15 minute or so program blocks of a show then send it to the affiliates. Your could do the show 20 or 30 minutes ahead. Stations in the Central saves the files for an hour, Mountain 2 hours Pacific 3 hours etc. perfect day parts.
 
I have always wondered why someone hasn't figured out how record 15 minute or so program blocks of a show then send it to the affiliates. Your could do the show 20 or 30 minutes ahead. Stations in the Central saves the files for an hour, Mountain 2 hours Pacific 3 hours etc. perfect day parts.

its been done for 2 decades or more

before Westwood one, there was Waitt Radio owned by NRG, and that localization system then got sold to WW1

And around 2014 came LRN.

I cant legally get into specifics, but both systems from LRN and WW1 operate in the same manner from a technical stand point.. the music, the imaging, liners, everything sits on a computer at the station and jocks VT breaks, that are pushed right to that same station computer

If True Oldies isnt being done that way, it should be.

Even the satellite formats from Westwood one that are on traditional actual satellite are mostly voicetracked these days
 
Is Scott still actively recording new tracks for TOC? Or are they generic breaks recycled with new music logs?
 
Is Scott still actively recording new tracks for TOC? Or are they generic breaks recycled with new music logs?
It seems Shannon does record new breaks for TOC. He sometimes refers to something recent. He also will tell us what was played, both the most recent song and the song before it. I guess the computer could play the same two songs back-to-back and he could give the same outro now and three months from now. But that would be a lot of work. For "This Day in Music History," that likely is something he did once and each of the 365 editions gets rolled out every year on the same day.

Todd Pettingill complained about something when co-hosting mornings with Shannon on WPLJ. Pettingill said sometimes, while a couple of songs were playing live on 95.5, Shannon would be recording breaks for TOC. He claims occasionally they had to let another song play on WPLJ if Shannon wasn't finished with his TOC work. So it's clear Shannon enjoys what he does on TOC. Of course, that was a decade ago.
 
I have always wondered why someone hasn't figured out how record 15 minute or so program blocks of a show then send it to the affiliates. Your could do the show 20 or 30 minutes ahead. Stations in the Central saves the files for an hour, Mountain 2 hours Pacific 3 hours etc. perfect day parts.
Thanks for writing in code. I have little idea it is you're trying to say. But I'm probably in the minority here.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom