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Happened to be up in NE Ohio today and tuned in 94.9 WQMX! Great to hear live and local radio! For a small market this is a true gem! Live on air talent even on the weekends!
Happened to be up in NE Ohio today and tuned in 94.9 WQMX! Great to hear live and local radio! For a small market this is a true gem! Live on air talent even on the weekends!
A lot of their people work all across the stations they own. Not sure if they voice-track or if they're doing it "live" across all of them. I'm not a country fan so don't listen to WQMX and probably won't until they bring back "The Quiet Island" of WDBN. {Yeah, never going to happen and besides the WDBN call letters are on a station in Wrightsville, Georgia now and have an "Urban" format known as 107.9 Jamz.}
A shame there are no commercial easy listening stations anymore. I know advertisers aren't interested in older folks, but apparently they were back in the day when there were numerous easy listening stations in the Cleveland/Akron area.
A shame there are no commercial easy listening stations anymore. I know advertisers aren't interested in older folks, but apparently they were back in the day when there were numerous easy listening stations in the Cleveland/Akron area.
Correct, they were at a time when there were few other choices available, and when easy listening radio was often used for in-store music. Today, advertisers have many more efficient ways of reaching their target demo.
Commercial classical was also once a big thing for the older demo. Cleveland had one of the pre-eminent classical stations in the country. Now that format is kept alive as a non-commercial format.
I was on an airport shuttle yesterday and the driver was playing K-Love. To me, that's an equivalent of what was once easy listening.
Back to the OP: I agree that WQMX is a fantastic station. Even though it's in Akron, it reaches parts of Cleveland. It consistently shows up in the Cleveland Nielsen book.
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