• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

AM 1110 Off The Air?

Yes, they must maintain licensed power and minimum hours of service. But they can apply to reduce the class of their license, which is routinely granted.

WBT could probably diplex somewhere with 50 kW days and 500 W nights. Maybe 1 kW nights. All non-directional. Hard to say precisely without the fancy software.

That's right. WBT is currently 50,000 watts non-directional by day. It only uses one tower in the daytime. So as PT Board Op says, it could ask the FCC to maintain 50 kW by day and reduce power at night to whatever avoids interference to KFAB Omaha, the other Class A station on 1110 AM.

It currently uses a three-tower array after sunset to protect KFAB while staying at 50 kW. So dropping the nighttime power while switching to a non-directional antenna would allow it to sell the current tower location. Then it could move to a single tower and share it with another AM station in the Charlotte market.
 
I think that may be overstated. Do radio station owners primarily care about the market their stations are operating in? Sure.

But many of their advertisers have locations beyond the counties that make up the Charlotte metro. I think the banks, supermarkets, restaurant chains, tourist attractions and other advertisers like having WBT selling their product or services to folks in communities that tune in beyond the borders of the metro area designated by Nielsen.
I believe you're right there.

BTW, I was going across the George Washington Bridge last night and hit the scan button on my car radio. There was 1110 WBT with its soft instrumental music, coming in on my car's radio, 1,000 miles to the northeast. Maybe Urban One should learn from Audacy. That company has kept nearly all the AM news and news-talk stations it owns on the air, continuing to simulcast the FM stations that are now the primary destinations for listeners. WFAN, WINS, WBBM, WSCR, KCBS. There must be more than 20 powerful AM stations that Audacy is still simulcasting even after giving them an FM simulcast.

Yes, they should definitely reconsider and keep it on, but they more than likely, won't do either of them.
 
But many of their advertisers have locations beyond the counties that make up the Charlotte metro. I think the banks, supermarkets, restaurant chains, tourist attractions and other advertisers like having WBT selling their product or services to folks in communities that tune in beyond the borders of the metro area designated by Nielsen.
Nearly all the big advertisers use agencies. They buy rated markets that they can quantify. They don’t buy rural areas that are not measured.
 
But many of their advertisers have locations beyond the counties that make up the Charlotte metro. I think the banks, supermarkets, restaurant chains, tourist attractions and other advertisers like having WBT selling their product or services to folks in communities that tune in beyond the borders of the metro area designated by Nielsen.
With occasional exceptions, none of those categories of business are advertising on the radio, especially at night. That's one of the existential crises in the industry ... not enough big brand advertisers.

But for argument, let's say Harris-Teeter is advertising on radio. Harris-Teeter is a supermarket owned by Kroger, which is based in Cincinnati. Chances are real high that the twenty-something year old ad buyer based in Cincy has never been to Charlotte, and would have no reason to know anything about its coverage beyond Charlotte. They only see the ratings info and the prices the radio station expects.

With so many companies being consolidated, it is rare these days that an ad buyer is actually in the market they are buying, so they only know what the numbers say.

A station appearing in nearby markets ratings is extremely rare these days, so the measurements that appear on a buyer's desk wouldn't indicate WBT had listening beyond Charlotte, thus it cannot be something "advertisers like."

BTW, unrelated to Charlotte... but Kroger cutting all its radio advertising was one of the things that really hurt one of my former employers. Kroger went from a $5000 a month account to $0 overnight.
 
Yes, they must maintain licensed power and minimum hours of service. But they can apply to reduce the class of their license, which is routinely granted.

WBT could probably diplex somewhere with 50 kW days and 500 W nights. Maybe 1 kW nights. All non-directional. Hard to say precisely without the fancy software.

Another dumb question, if they "reduce the class of their license", does that allow them to reduce their power as well?
 
That's right. WBT is currently 50,000 watts non-directional by day. It only uses one tower in the daytime. So as PT Board Op says, it could ask the FCC to maintain 50 kW by day and reduce power at night to whatever avoids interference to KFAB Omaha, the other Class A station on 1110 AM.

It currently uses a three-tower array after sunset to protect KFAB while staying at 50 kW. So dropping the nighttime power while switching to a non-directional antenna would allow it to sell the current tower location. Then it could move to a single tower and share it with another AM station in the Charlotte market.

That's kind of what I was getting at. I was trying to find a way for them to get rid of the existing property and still transmit on 1110 AM. If a single tower could pull that off at 50 kW, they could do it.
 
That's kind of what I was getting at. I was trying to find a way for them to get rid of the existing property and still transmit on 1110 AM. If a single tower could pull that off at 50 kW, they could do it.
But, why? If RO is not getting the desired outcome from the existing facility, what would they do with a technically inferior one? Do you think revenue would magically appear? They're better off focusing their efforts on initiatives that have more revenue potential. I'm sure that if someone had the wherewithal to do what you describe, they'd be in discussions with Radio One to acquire the license right now. There is no incentive to make material investments in obsolete AM facilities.
 
The petition has over 500 signatures so far. Next milestone to reach will be 1,000.

Is there a goal for the number of signatures needed?
If you could get at least 5 or 10% of the total market population on the petition, then you could create some PR headaches with the local media.

But Unban One won't care as long as they get the check for their part of the sale. They want 1110 to go away unless they get some serious cash (at least several months of their Charlotte cluster's billing) from selling 1110 license. One less competitor for them.
 
BTW, unrelated to Charlotte... but Kroger cutting all its radio advertising was one of the things that really hurt one of my former employers. Kroger went from a $5000 a month account to $0 overnight.


I knew a small station down south, which lost their biggest account (to use current terms), they said, because of a bumbling DJ. I personally believe that was the first nail in that station's coffin.
 
But, why? If RO is not getting the desired outcome from the existing facility, what would they do with a technically inferior one? Do you think revenue would magically appear? They're better off focusing their efforts on initiatives that have more revenue potential. I'm sure that if someone had the wherewithal to do what you describe, they'd be in discussions with Radio One to acquire the license right now. There is no incentive to make material investments in obsolete AM facilities.
I was just thinking in terms of being able to reach their core market (for which they really don't need 50 kW), and being able to adapt so as not to need that huge tower array, enabling them to sell the property but keep broadcasting on 1110. As one poster noted upthread, though, they could run 50 kW during the day from a single tower, and run lower power at night from the same tower to protect other stations on 1110.
 
I was just thinking in terms of being able to reach their core market (for which they really don't need 50 kW), and being able to adapt so as not to need that huge tower array, enabling them to sell the property but keep broadcasting on 1110. As one poster noted upthread, though, they could run 50 kW during the day from a single tower, and run lower power at night from the same tower to protect other stations on 1110.
It still does not matter. Relevant listeners (ones who can attract advertisers) are obtaining content elsewhere. Why is that hard for people to understand?
 


Back
Top Bottom