In the Buffalo market, jazz went from nights and weekends on the main channel, to JazzWorks on an HD 2, to extinction.
The Top 3 Markets still have it on an analog FM channel: WBGO 88.3 Newark/NYC, KKJZ 88.1 Long Beach/LA, and WDCB 90.9 Glen Ellyn/Chicago (with blues on Saturday nights & Sunday mornings Central time). I don't know how many others are left.There's still a little jazz radio left, but not a lot. Most of what is still out there is on HD2, or specialty shows at night or on weekends.
Service marks are territorial. Just because iHeart has the rights to the KissFM brand in Ohio doesn't mean they do in New York. Majic means classic hits in Cleveland (iHeart) but Magic means classic rock in Philly (Beasley) and AC in Boston (Audacy).What I don't get is why secular stations don't consolidate like K-Love did. Instead of Z-100 or KIIS FM, just have one Top 40 station called iHeartHits with one nationwide schedule.
It works with television. NBC manages to have affiliates in every American city playing the same programming. And this is also how other countries in the world do radio.
I know you are using "satellite" as a term, but it is dated. The iHeart formats are distributed via their web system that delivers formats as workparts that are assembled locally with, or without, things like news, weather, traffic and other features. The system also allows custom playlists, using the iHeart library but creating a station's own localized blend.iHeart has satellite music services available for markets that can't support local talent. So does Cumulus.
There are national service marks, like most consumer brands from cars to corn flakes. Many stations in the past just registered a name in their own market area of one or a couple of states. But when the internet arrived, many discovered that some streamer in Caribou, Maine, had the national registration to a name they wanted. So the big guys started registering names nationally, too.Service marks are territorial. Just because iHeart has the rights to the KissFM brand in Ohio doesn't mean they do in New York. Majic means classic hits in Cleveland (iHeart) but Magic means classic rock in Philly (Beasley) and AC in Boston (Audacy).
Cumulus tried rebranding almost all of their country stations as "Nash FM" or "Nash Icon". It didn't work for a variety of reasons.
But it probably is a niche market, as I'd be willing to bet that the vast majority of people who identify their religion as "Christian" will never listen to CCM or any other kind of Christian radio. It seems to me that those stations serve a pretty specific subset of Christians.68% fo the US identifies as being part of a Christian religion. CCM is far from a niche market. The other formats the OP borught up truly ARE niche. And the answer may be as simple as that- I am not sure.
I would add that most evangelicals I know, especially younger adults and males, don't typically listen to CCM.
My broader point is, that if you believe this stuff is a cultural treasure, worth sharing and educating people about, that's a logical non-commercial mission.
Maybe the window's passed but the theory makes sense.
From data I have gathered, a substantial number of Contemporary Christian music listeners are not churchgoers at all. They simply say they're spiritual and typically are not members of churches. Some listeners claim they simply want a 'positive' music format to keep them focused on the positive and good in the world. I'm not trying to minimize the churchgoing listeners that are easily the majority. Many are not evangelicals. They're the family that goes to church on Sunday. They find the programming more kid friendly and they like the influence the music has on them through the week as thy try ti meld Christian teachings and secular life and workplace.
Christian radio, aside from the 100% music format, that is successful wants to reach the choir. You've heard the line preaching to the choir. The ministries on the station might do the 'alter call' but really they want the person already deep into church to support the ministry (or buy their special offers). In a nutshell, successful Christian radio does not evangelize because that's not where the money is.
Not to mention KCCV-FM when it first went on the air in 1993 for the Kansas City market, though that was described at the time as "middle-of-the-road inspirational music". Still, it was a contrast to KCCV(AM), which was straight-up preaching at the time.CCM doesn't target males. It goes after 25-54 females. Air 1 switched to worship music to try to get younger adults. The most religious person I know finds CCM to be an abomination and listens to Bott Radio almost all-the-time. He went as far as to suggest his church stop offering a contemporary service because those people weren't true believers and suggested the church was bastardizing its message by offering such a service. I sometimes wonder what he would think if he knew Bott Radio operated a commercial CCM station about 30 years ago in Oklahoma City.
K-Love is well crafted but, yes, the repetitiousness of it can get to me pretty fast. I also find that to be true of secular adult contemporary. In any event, I don't find Christian hip-hop to be repetitive (and I am not that much of a hip-hop fan!) Perhaps because hip-hop is much more closely related to the spoken word than CCM is, it's a natural extension of preaching and witnessing, and it just all seems to fit.I'm about as nonreligious as they come, and, while I don't choose it myself, I find most CCM stations to be listenable. I tend to get bored with it quickly {...}
There aren't a lot of Stevie Wonders out there looking to do this commercially or as a non-profit foundation.
True, and XPN sort of tried with "XPonential Radio" - that still lives on on HD, for those who care. But it's not hosted or promoted very well.
Is anyone running XPonential Radio on a main channel? My market has it on an HD3, and that's on-pair with where I've heard it pretty much everywhere.
Nine stations total, plus streaming. So I'd have to classify it primarily as a streaming service. When I click on the link for the stream, I get a 404.
List is out of date. XPoNential Radio is no longer available in Houston via KUHF HD-3, replaced recently with a simulcast of “The Vibe” from KTSU HD-2 as part of a program sharing agreement.