A few facts about The Dove...
--It is always the #1 station in Tampa Bay, often with double digits. That was true under the diary system and it's true today with People Meters.
--It has evolved from one of the last big market Easy Listening stations. To this day, it still plays one instrumental each hour, usually around :35. Sometimes at night, there's another instrumental around :05. The original poster uses the phrase "Smooth Jazz." Yes, sometimes that instrumental is a song that was popular on Smooth Jazz stations by David Benoit or Larry Carlton. But sometimes it's another familiar instrumental, such as 60s-70s-80s hits like "The Entertainer" or "Hill Street Blues." Or sometimes it's a movie theme such as "Forest Gump" or "Driving Miss Daisy."
--Up till a couple of years ago, you could hear Sinatra every couple of hours plus Nat King Cole, Dean Martin, Connie Francis scattered among the 60's, 70's and 80's soft hits. These days much of the standards artists have been eliminated. Once in a while you may still hear "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" or "New York, New York" but those songs are rare now.
--The Dove still plays plenty of artists that were staples on Soft AC stations 15 years ago but no longer, such as The Carpenters, The Fifth Dimension, Kenny Rogers, Anne Murray, Chicago, The Beatles, Barbra Streisand, Neil Diamond and Barry Manilow.
--Cox owns so many FM stations in Tampa Bay, it really doesn't have any format hole it could fill by killing The Dove. Cox already has two Classic Rock stations, a mainstream AC, a country station and even an 80s-90s Hot AC station.
--The Dove's payroll is at a bare minimum. It employs only one DJ, Dick Ring, who does mornings. He even reads his own news headlines so no newscaster is needed. The rest of the day is automated, but that was the way it was during its days as an easy listening station and that practice continued during the transition to Very Soft AC. Radio & Records Magazine used to list every year the top 20 DJs around the country in morning and afternoon drive. WDUV always made the afternoon list, but the DJ would always be listed as "automated."
--It's true, there are a lot of retirees in the Tampa Bay listening area for The Dove to calls its own. But I think this format would work just about anywhere if the sales staff knew how to sell these older demos to mom and pop retailers. The Dove is #1 6+, #1 35-64 but may not even make the top 10 25-54. Not great for an FM station although that's pretty typical for a talk station. If a sales staff can sell an AM talk station, it can sell a format in most towns like The Dove.
Gregg
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