Delilah turns in the license due to lack of advertiser support. Not surprising given the small town and that massive 50kw's mustve been a giant power bill and other stations out that way have faltered.
As I mentioned on a local OR board, it's not like she didn't know this going in. I wonder what changed. She bought it after Covid had ravaged economies, not before. And she certainly knows radio...
It's where she started in radio.She wanted to give her hometown station once last chance... few would do what she did
Translator, while a good idea, still wouldn't have saved it. KNPT Newport had a translator, and a stream, and it still went off the air.And also no translator. Still proud of her for giving it a try!
There was a long thread on here when Delilah bought KDUN and that was our basic conclusion at that time. The power level wasn't all that important - it probably would also have failed if it had been a standalone C2 FM in Reedsport.I cant think of a worse place for a 50 kw AM to try to survive in.
Same with Newport, though, which is just 20 miles south, and had a sister station in Lincoln City (along with an FM translator and stream) -- KNPT (and the others in its small cluster) still failed. Tourism apparently doesn't pay the bills for radio and other local media enough to keep more than just a few stations on the air.Lincoln City sees a massive number of visitors throughout the summer. Just about everybody here (co-workers and families) in my little town goes to that place at least once per summer.
Florence, about 20 miles north and within the signal area, had another 8000 and KDUN's signal undoubtedly reached Coos Bay, an area with maybe 20+K, but even that extra reach wasn't enough to keep the station on the air. There just weren't enough local businesses to support the station. Even suburban AM's and FM's in metro areas can have trouble with advertising in today's business climate.Reedsport is a small town with a declining population. With only about 4,300 people.. The economy is terrible, with small businesses struggling to survive. A paper mill, now shuttered, was the big employer.
I cant think of a worse place for a 50 kw AM to try to survive in.
Tourist attractions have always been a tough sell. Tourists generally have some things on their hit list before they arrive, based on online research, guide books, or even generative AI, so a lot of their money is already committed before they arrive.Tourism apparently doesn't pay the bills for radio and other local media enough to keep more than just a few stations on the air.
People who aren't on vacation would not drive to Pigeon Forge specifically for those attractions, and only a small percentage of listeners to Knoxville radio on any given day are tourists.
radioinsight.com
I worked summers at WCCW in Traverse City, MI, a very tourist-based economy at the time. While there was some "summer advertising" there was really no huge increase in radio revenue from tourism. There was a "pitch" to advertisers about tourists, most of whom came in cars, listening and hearing ads, businesses knew that the most effective media was the collection of tourist newspapers, magazines and the like that were handed out everywhere.Same with Newport, though, which is just 20 miles south, and had a sister station in Lincoln City (along with an FM translator and stream) -- KNPT (and the others in its small cluster) still failed. Tourism apparently doesn't pay the bills for radio and other local media enough to keep more than just a few stations on the air.