Nope. Coincidence.Ugh ... Did they time this right, on purpose? 😓
WSSL 100.5 & 101.1 Playing the same song at 7:33pm
Just in Case by Morgan Wallen
Nope. Coincidence.Ugh ... Did they time this right, on purpose? 😓
WSSL 100.5 & 101.1 Playing the same song at 7:33pm
Just in Case by Morgan Wallen
Most country stations play at least one Wallen song an hour, sometimes as many as three -- his current hit (which this week would be 20 Cigarettes), a recurrent (like Just in Case), and a collaboration (most often I Had Some Help w/ Post Malone). It's inevitable that two stations will occasionally be playing two of his hits simultaneously.Nope. Coincidence.
radio spent time developing personalities in the past 2 decades?will it be a jukebox or will Audacy add personalities.
99.5 has flipped so many times that I really believe it means ZERO in this market anymore. They could run any format and, without any publicity, no one will know or care.Yea, and with the way things have been lately, they'll probably flip something to country too. 😲😂
I think Star 99.5 will flip eventually unfortuately, but maybe they'll move AC to/Swap it with 98.1/94.1
I guess JBB gave 101.1 more ratings than I thought. Audacy must have been very motivated after they announced their retirement from syndication to flip an entire 100kw station after that. Let's just see what transpires now. Will Audacy make 101 a stupid music box, no jocks, same songs you can get on the other stations (or better yet, a commercial free stream?) They'll probably have some canned morning show and get jocks from other markets to voice track the rest of the day. Yawn.Honestly, I wondered almost 2 decades ago when WESC and WSSL were riding VERY high if Audacy (then Entercom) would ever consider attempt country. I sort of gave up on the idea, and we’ve seen increased softness in the numbers with WSSL and especially WESC recently. I wonder what drove this decision? I wonder how long they’ve had it planned, waiting for the end of JB&B?
Audacy does country well, but so far the presentation on this is painfully hokey. iHeart does country well. At this point, what has me most curious is if iHeart will react, and how they even can. They have two heritage stations that have their own niches carved out. As Lance pointed out in his article, this is positioned between the two. My opinion is still that if it has much impact, it’ll be more on 92.5.
I’ll listen to 102.5 The Lake, X-98.5 and The Fan, but this market has become painfully void of any choices. No classic rocker. No AC on a signal I don’t have to change leaving Simpsonville. No classic hits. Charlotte, Columbia and Charleston have all of those formats plus more variety. I generally listen to radio on the iHeart in the car. I actually prefer it over SiriusXM which I also have. It’s nice to hear well programmed, other “local” stations (even if they’re voicetracked), in other markets. GSP has lost all of the variety it had just a half decade ago. The markets I mentioned above actually have basic formats that this market doesn’t even have or can’t support. But we have 3 country stations and 3 or 4 sports talk stations (in a not-big sports market).As far as iHeart, if you've got two heritage country stations, you DON'T react. At least not musically. Do what you've been doing but do it better.
Between country and Christian stations in this market, my radio NEVER goes to FM in the car anymore.
Mid-'80s through the '90s is pretty much what classic country is now, with '00s titles slowly moving in. And remember, it's more about the sound than the year. You'll hear late '80s George Strait and Reba McEntire, but not Don Williams and T.G. Sheppard.Charleston’s 98.5 is basically WESC 15-20 years ago. Mostly 80s and 90s country with a touch of old stuff, but no new stuff. It serves a niche in the market leaving 92.5 and WEZL to play the new stuff. It also has Clemson games and even though it is only a 250 watt translator it serves almost the entire market.
Audacy probably wants to take revenue from iHeart, that is all this is about
WESC’s classic country format is pretty much that. They don’t really go past 2010. Emphasis is on late 80s-90s with some 70s staples still thrown in. 101.1 is incorporating a lot of what WESC plays.Mid-'80s through the '90s is pretty much what classic country is now, with '00s titles slowly moving in. And remember, it's more about the sound than the year. You'll hear late '80s George Strait and Reba McEntire, but not Don Williams and T.G. Sheppard.
When driving up 85 in my car, I usually lose the WSRV signal a little past Anderson, maybe halfway between Anderson and Greenville.How well does WSRV 97.1 Gainesville/Atlanta cover Anderson/Greenville?
It used to reach Greenville but now there is a station in Spartanburg on the same channel that drowns it out. I think it may be a sports format.How well does WSRV 97.1 Gainesville/Atlanta cover Anderson/Greenville?
In Charlotte 96.9 FM was Thunder Country some years back. Myrtle Beach had a similar format on 93.9 and 93.7 in the late 90s.I like the NJ Country Station Approach a bit bitter .. uh, better. Thunder 106 (WKMK & WTHJ). Supposed to be a "Rock'n Country" Approach, as they used to say. I Guess in that case, the WROQ letters would be fine where they are.
Outside Charlotte is a station playing 70s, 80s and 90s.Mid-'80s through the '90s is pretty much what classic country is now, with '00s titles slowly moving in. And remember, it's more about the sound than the year. You'll hear late '80s George Strait and Reba McEntire, but not Don Williams and T.G. Sheppard.
How well does WSRV 97.1 Gainesville/Atlanta cover Anderson/Greenville?
When driving up 85 in my car, I usually lose the WSRV signal a little past Anderson, maybe halfway between Anderson and Greenville.