I wonder if they will be leasing out time for any more English language programs/informercials in different dayparts? Or if these slots are enough to make a few $$$ and keep the clasic rock/pop format viable.
I don't think they consider the classic rock/pop/oldies to be a viable format at all. I'm thinking it's probably just a placeholder format that MRB sends from a hard drive from their headquarters in NYC to their stations that are "in limbo" either financially, programming, and/or ownership wise, to keep them on the air while they either look for new time buyers/leasers, or put the station(s) up for sale.
They've put absolutely no local effort or personnel into the classic rock/pop/oldies since it started a couple of weeks ago, no spots during it, no promotion, no sales, nothing but songs playing from NYC and automated top-of-hour ID's.
It's possible that they could try to sell more sponsored shows with ads, and keep the classic hits/oldies playing as filler at other unsold times, but with their only two local employees having been laid off and no one running anything locally, I don't know whether that's likely.
All the songs being played on WLYN/WAZN are already played on AM radio in the area anyway on 1510 WMEX and/or 740 WJIB, and those two stations have pretty good day signals all over the metro Boston area, especially WJIB when the move to 720 w/5kW days from the WEZE site in Medford will happen, tentatively now later this month. And those two stations at least have local daytime presence, WMEX with live daytime DJ's, and WJIB with Garabedian's drop-in inserts, recorded listener requests, etc...
I guess WAZN could promote as classic pop hits/oldies for the cities, towns and suburbs immediately northwest of Boston and WLYN for the North Shore, but that would require hiring sales people and production to put local content into their own format. I can't see them doing that, and they'd be vying for a mostly senior specialty audience against WMEX and WJIB.
I am curious as to what happens to WLYN and WAZN. If they get more new brokered programming, would they run that from NYC also, or hire a new person to program that up here? I guess potential local time-buyers could send audio files down to NYC, and then have MRB play them by remote from there...