He had an all-Beatles format on his AM at 1260 (then KGIL) for the first eight months of 1997.It changed at midnight on New Year's Day to an all Beatles station. I can't remember if Saul has had an all Beatles station in the past. He's changed so many times until I simply cannot remember all the different format changes over the years.
It sure is. Incidentally, way back in the 90s when Saul tried All Beatles radio on 1260, KUSC's Rich Caparella actually had a live gig on 1260 for a time and said on the air that the new format drew the highest ratings "this frequency has had in many years". Not sure if that was really true, always wanted to ask him about that..anyway, the All Beatles on HD-3 is a nice "curiosity". I'm pretty sure though that any "all single artist" type station has a very quick listener burn-out factor. Stations have tried all Beatles, all Elvis, all Sinatra, etc and never seem to last very long."The Wave"..."The Surf"...
Hey, Saul can do whatever he wants. It's paid for.
It sure is. Incidentally, way back in the 90s when Saul tried All Beatles radio on 1260, KUSC's Rich Caparella actually had a live gig on 1260 for a time and said on the air that the new format drew the highest ratings "this frequency has had in many years". Not sure if that was really true, always wanted to ask him about that..
AM 1260 did not register at all in 1997, it hasn't registered a 1.0 or greater on its own since the Fall 1973. Its largest share ever was a 2.2 in 1967.The all-Beatles format on 1260 began January 1, 1997 and ended July 19 of the same year. Spring, 1997 would have been the only complete rating book and they did not get a 1.0 share (which was the cutoff for the R&R ratings directories). @Huff might have the numbers below that.
AM 1260 did not register at all in 1997, it hasn't registered a 1.0 or greater on its own since the Fall 1973. Its largest share ever was a 2.2 in 1967.
As I've mentioned on other threads: in the 60s if you were an adult such as my parents in the SFV, and you weren't listening to KMPC or KFI you were listening to KGIL. For so many that was their local station- It sounded great with Major Market talent.Thanks, @Huff .
The thing is that there was still enough of a business in local direct advertising in the San Fernando Valley that KGIL could actually be okay with no meaningful number in the L.A. book for quite a few years.
Eventually, though---being "The Valley's Station" wasn't enough.
As I've mentioned on other threads: in the 60s if you were an adult such as my parents in the SFV, and you weren't listening to KMPC or KFI you were listening to KGIL. For so many that was their local station- It sounded great with Major Market talent.
Surprising that Oldies K-Surf is gone, as it has been the most successful format of all the HD formats that have aired on 105.1 since the launch of the HD digital subchannels in 2011.
By actually appearing in the ratings book. The others never seem to rise above a 0.0. The cherished K-Mozart does, but presumably because it also is aired on 1260 AM as well as the 98.3 FM booster in the SF Valley.Given the lack of commercials on any of the subchannels, I have to ask what your basis is for calling any of them "successful".
By actually appearing in the ratings book. The others never seem to rise above a 0.0. The cherished K-Mozart does, but presumably because it also is aired on 1260 AM as well as the 98.3 FM booster in the SF Valley.
Oh that is easy (for me). If I am listening, it is successful.Given the lack of commercials on any of the subchannels, I have to ask what your basis is for calling any of them "successful".
Oh that is easy (for me). If I am listening, it is successful.
Any other metrics including (and especially) profitability are for others to worry about.
I’m guessing @david means “longest lasting.” The KSurf format lasted a total of a little under nine years, dating back to when it launched on 1260 on March 17, 2017. The 1260 frequency’s previous stint with oldies lasted just ten months, from August 2004 to June 2005; at which point the format was flipped back to standards.Given the lack of commercials on any of the subchannels, I have to ask what your basis is for calling any of them "successful".