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Northwest Arkansas KXVB 101.5 Flips to Conservative Talk

As is the case with most college towns. Hanover, NH, home of Dartmouth, always goes Democratic, but the rest of Grantham County is pretty darn Trumpy.
This station’s reach is primarily limited to Washington and Benton counties. While the area still leans right politically, Northwest Arkansas is more purple than much of the rest of the state thanks in part to the influence of the three major corporate headquarters in the region. It tends to be more moderately conservative than deeply Trump aligned.
 
Change happened at 10:55 this morning after playing End of the Road by Boyz II Men.

I don't personally see this being a super successful move but I guess there really aren't many format holes to fill in the area.


I don't like to see locally run businesses fail, but my first thought was that, aside from Clay and Buck, it's a bunch of B and C list syndicated talk hosts. Doesn't seem like a recipe for success to me, though it should be fairly cheap to run.

Maybe I'm just missing something, and talk radio is just an untapped audience waiting to happen, but it has never been that in the past. KFAY flipped to talk in 1990 and has rarely put up respectable numbers.
 
Interestingly, Cumulus had a translator CP for KFAY that they let expire.

I think this is a smart format move but there are definitely some weaker shows in the lineup.

Would love to see them invest in local news/weather.
 
I don't like to see locally run businesses fail, but my first thought was that, aside from Clay and Buck, it's a bunch of B and C list syndicated talk hosts. Doesn't seem like a recipe for success to me, though it should be fairly cheap to run.
It seems to me this station will air all the top syndicated talk shows except for Hannity and Levin (which air on KFAY).

But in a post-Rush world, that's not saying a whole lot. I probably could survey 100 people in Fayetteville, and no one would know then name Chad Benson.

The only other quirk is airing Michael DelGiorano in AM drive, instead of a news-driven program like "This Morning with Gordon Deal." But that may be intentional, to counter-program KFAY's "America in the Morning."
 
I was struck by the following paragraph from @lanceventa's post:

"Owner John Lykins followed, “479 Media is proud to be Northwest Arkansas’ only locally-owned full cluster of commercial radio stations. Freedom FM 101.5 reflects our mission to serve this community with meaningful content while giving local businesses a powerful and affordable platform to reach customers. We believe there’s a real need for this kind of station, and we’re uniquely positioned to deliver it with a local-first approach.”"

This was after I read the list of programs the station was going to air. I guess the "local approach" may be in the local advertisers who choose to purchase time to air their ads...
 
It seems to me this station will air all the top syndicated talk shows except for Hannity and Levin (which air on KFAY).

You might be able to convince me that Glenn Beck is an A-lister, but I don't see much of a case for anybody else in that lineup. When I worked for a station that carried him, he didn't do much for us, but you'd have a realistic possibility of convincing me he's a top-notch talent. You might also be able to make a case for Dana Loesch, but I don't think it would be a very strong one. I wouldn't consider Levin an A-lister by any stretch of the imagination either. Talk radio might as well not exist after 6:00 PM. Being on in those slots is the equivalent of playing in garbage time.

But in a post-Rush world, that's not saying a whole lot. I probably could survey 100 people in Fayetteville, and no one would know then name Chad Benson.

On that, we likely agree. Syndicated talk really never offered that much during the Rush era either. AM has been managing decline for at least the last 40 years, and syndicated talk was about managing that decline by getting cheap programming with extra avails to sell. It was, for the most part, never about providing quality programming. Rush may have fit that bill, but you won't find much of anyone else on the syndication circuit who did until Hannity, who came along almost 15 years later.

The only other quirk is airing Michael DelGiorano in AM drive,

I believe this is the first non-iHeart station to carry DelGiorno. I agree it will be interesting to see how he works. He might have a little equity in the market with diehard talk radio fans, though, due to his time in Tulsa at KRMG and KFAQ. I don't think they ever drew huge numbers in Northwest Arkansas, but both are available on decent radios, at least in the daytime. I seem to remember KRMG and KFAQ's predecessor, KVOO, showing up in the ratings, albeit near the bottom, when I went to school there.

instead of a news-driven program like "This Morning with Gordon Deal." But that may be intentional, to counter-program KFAY's "America in the Morning."

KFAY has never been much of a news station despite branding itself as a news/talk station. I went to school there during the Oklahoma City bombing. I was picking up my girlfriend in front of Brough Commons, as I usually did Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, on April 19, 1995. I had Keg 92 on, and, right as she was getting in, I heard a mention of an emergency blood drive due to a bombing in Oklahoma City. Growing up in Texas and Oklahoma, I wanted to know what was going on, and, when I flipped on 1030, it wasn't airing news programming. So, I switched to 790, which was in wall-to-wall news.
 
You might be able to convince me that Glenn Beck is an A-lister, but I don't see much of a case for anybody else in that lineup. When I worked for a station that carried him, he didn't do much for us, but you'd have a realistic possibility of convincing me he's a top-notch talent.
I'm basing this on comparisons to other syndicated talk hosts, based on dayparts. Glenn Beck has been doing this for decades and his show is widely carried. The only notable late morning host is Fox News Radio's Brian Kilmeade show.

The morning daypart is really only filled by DelGiorno. I don't think there are any other talk shows live in that daypart.

Clay and Buck won the mid-day daypart by default when Dan Bongino, left WW1 to be FBI deputy director (briefly). Nobody else had major market carriage.
Hannity wins PM drive by longevity, and Levin early evenings for similar reasoning.

Erick Erickson is probably better known than Premiere's offering of Jesse Kelly, although Erickson's radio show hasn't been terribly successful.
Joe Pags has picked up quite a few affiliates, especially for a show not syndicated by one of the two main syndicators (Premiere or WW1).

Coast To Coast is undoubtedly the top late night program, if that is worth anything.

You might also be able to make a case for Dana Loesch, but I don't think it would be a very strong one. I wouldn't consider Levin an A-lister by any stretch of the imagination either. Talk radio might as well not exist after 6:00 PM. Being on in those slots is the equivalent of playing in garbage time.
I'll agree that Loesch's star has fallen pretty hard. She picked up quite a few of the Audacy talk stations after Rush died, and I think most have since dropped her, or demoted the show to late nights.

Dana in afternoons is sort of an odd choice, but when you can't have Hannity, I think the only other option running live at 2pm CT is Fox News Radio's Guy Benson.

I also just realized that I mixed up Chad Benson for Joe Pags in my earlier post, so perhaps that's evidence of how wrong I am.😂
 
I'm basing this on comparisons to other syndicated talk hosts, based on dayparts. Glenn Beck has been doing this for decades and his show is widely carried. The only notable late morning host is Fox News Radio's Brian Kilmeade show.

Being widely carried alone does not make an A-lister, though I will give you that Beck is, at least, in a prime daypart when people are actually listening to talk radio, and, yes, he has been there for quite awhile now. That's better than what can be said for many of the syndicated talk hosts. He also built it into a media empire, though you don't really have to be an A-lister in radio to do that.

The morning daypart is really only filled by DelGiorno. I don't think there are any other talk shows live in that daypart.

Or it could've, you know, hired a local morning host for that slot. Maybe that's not feasible anymore in a market the size of Northwest Arkansas and in the current economic climate, but that's where you really want to put a local talent. I would assert that you don't really have any A-listers offered via syndication in morning drive. Not only is the schedule a grind, but you also don't have as many available stations because that's where so many talkers air local programming. I've been out of talk radio for a minute, to say the least, but I seem to remember Smerconish was also offered in mornings. He was the most palatable of the morning offerings to me, though I wouldn't call him an A-lister by any means. At least, when you listened to Smerconish, you could tell his opinions were his own; he wasn't just parroting talking points.

Clay and Buck won the mid-day daypart by default when Dan Bongino, left WW1 to be FBI deputy director (briefly). Nobody else had major market carriage.
Hannity wins PM drive by longevity, and Levin early evenings for similar reasoning.

Clay and Buck won the daypart against Bongino, too. He didn't get great numbers much of anywhere. From what I understand, Clay and Buck have lower numbers than Limbaugh, but they do better among younger and more salable demos. Rush's audience got old with him.

Hannity wins because he's been appointment listening pretty much since he signed on nationally almost 25 years ago. I worked at a station that carried him but didn't carry Rush because he was on the heritage talker across town. We put up billboards that said, "Rush Over to Hannity," and they seemed to work. Quite well, in fact.

Levin has been around for awhile, but he's on when most nobody is listening. He rides what little numbers talk radio has after dinnertime and doesn't run its core listeners off, but he doesn't bring people in. You can certainly make a good living doing that. Ask Delilah. If, however, Levin generated competitive numbers on his own, he'd be syndicated during the daytime.

Coast To Coast is undoubtedly the top late night program, if that is worth anything.

Agreed, though Coast-to-Coast was always where we made up barter inventory that was missed or pre-empted due to sports. It didn't air many paid spots. It is what it is and wouldn't work in any other daypart. It's a small niche. On a personal note, one of my cousins was an occasional guest on Coast-to-Coast when Art Bell hosted. He was a weird kid, really weird, though he became popular in the sci-fi community and may have been ahead of his time when it came to AI. He was definitely the kind of person who Bell's audience would've enjoyed, and I see how he got on that show.
 
Interestingly, Cumulus had a translator CP for KFAY that they let expire.

I think this is a smart format move but there are definitely some weaker shows in the lineup.

Would love to see them invest in local news/weather.


Haven't seen the lineup, but I too believe this is a good move overall. Re: KFAY, someone mentioned earlier, that they flipped to Talk back in 1990. If they're still talkin' that's saying something, to stay with a format that long. Oh and on that translator Cumulus let go, I believe they've let a lotta things go, hence where they are now IMHO.
 
I was struck by the following paragraph from @lanceventa's post:

"Owner John Lykins followed, “479 Media is proud to be Northwest Arkansas’ only locally-owned full cluster of commercial radio stations. Freedom FM 101.5 reflects our mission to serve this community with meaningful content while giving local businesses a powerful and affordable platform to reach customers. We believe there’s a real need for this kind of station, and we’re uniquely positioned to deliver it with a local-first approach.”"

This was after I read the list of programs the station was going to air. I guess the "local approach" may be in the local advertisers who choose to purchase time to air their ads...


I reckon that's what they mean, too. I would also, like to see concentration on local news/wx, etc. Oh and I meant translator CP, earlier, sorry.
 
I'm basing this on comparisons to other syndicated talk hosts, based on dayparts. Glenn Beck has been doing this for decades and his show is widely carried. The only notable late morning host is Fox News Radio's Brian Kilmeade show.

The morning daypart is really only filled by DelGiorno. I don't think there are any other talk shows live in that daypart.
Never heard of him, 'til this thread. Have heard of Kilmeade, from a distance, now that I think about it.

Clay and Buck won the mid-day daypart by default when Dan Bongino, left WW1 to be FBI deputy director (briefly). Nobody else had major market carriage.
Hannity wins PM drive by longevity, and Levin early evenings for similar reasoning.
I have to agree with that, hands down.

Erick Erickson is probably better known than Premiere's offering of Jesse Kelly, although Erickson's radio show hasn't been terribly successful.
Joe Pags has picked up quite a few affiliates, especially for a show not syndicated by one of the two main syndicators (Premiere or WW1).
Only ever heard of Erickson and that not much.

Coast To Coast is undoubtedly the top late night program, if that is worth anything.
That's true. I remember when Larry King Live held that slot down like nobody's business.


I'll agree that Loesch's star has fallen pretty hard. She picked up quite a few of the Audacy talk stations after Rush died, and I think most have since dropped her, or demoted the show to late nights.

Dana in afternoons is sort of an odd choice, but when you can't have Hannity, I think the only other option running live at 2pm CT is Fox News Radio's Guy Benson.
Only barely heard of Loesch.

I also just realized that I mixed up Chad Benson for Joe Pags in my earlier post, so perhaps that's evidence of how wrong I am.😂

It happens to the best of us LOL.
 
Sorry, completely forgot Beck, heard of him and in a good slot. Then again, who hasn't heard of him?
 
Haven't seen the lineup, but I too believe this is a good move overall. Re: KFAY, someone mentioned earlier, that they flipped to Talk back in 1990. If they're still talkin' that's saying something, to stay with a format that long.

What else are you going to do with an AM signal that only covers 1/2 of Washington County after dark? It's either talk radio or dismantle the towers and sell the land. I'm actually a little surprised the latter hasn't happened. That tower array is on prime real estate just behind the Sam's Club off of I-49 and Garland. A car dealership is right there, and new luxury housing is just around the corner. It's a stone's throw from John Calipari's house.

Oh and on that translator Cumulus let go, I believe they've let a lotta things go, hence where they are now IMHO.

If I remember correctly, Cumulus lost that translator (and a few others) in its bankruptcy about 10 years ago. The FCC ruled the company changed owners in the middle of the filing period and had to refile. The problem was that the ruling came down after the filing deadline.
 
DelGiorno was a decision rooted at least partly in him having been at KRMG. Loesch is a firebrand and I believed we needed something unique opposite the only real talk elephant in the room in Hannity. I had intended to put Ramsey on even though I hate that program as I find it repetitive and condescending, but I felt he was a large name brand, but he's out half the time and I was told it would be a 2+ month turnaround on liners so I laughed and said no thanks. I would've probably put Guy Benson on in a vacuum, but given KFAY is heavy Fox News I sought to just avoid that brand to some degree so we can be an alternative.

I know I'm biased but I really think it's a pretty strong lineup, at least in the context of modern talk radio. We're nto delusional about expectations, at least not on this station.

If anyone is bored the full lineup is on the website.

Freedom FM 101.5 On Air
 
DelGiorno was a decision rooted at least partly in him having been at KRMG. Loesch is a firebrand and I believed we needed something unique opposite the only real talk elephant in the room in Hannity. I had intended to put Ramsey on even though I hate that program as I find it repetitive and condescending, but I felt he was a large name brand, but he's out half the time and I was told it would be a 2+ month turnaround on liners so I laughed and said no thanks. I would've probably put Guy Benson on in a vacuum, but given KFAY is heavy Fox News I sought to just avoid that brand to some degree so we can be an alternative.

I know I'm biased but I really think it's a pretty strong lineup, at least in the context of modern talk radio. We're nto delusional about expectations, at least not on this station.

If anyone is bored the full lineup is on the website.

Freedom FM 101.5 On Air


Good to hear from someone on the other side of the glass, thanks for chiming in.
 


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