I'm sure David will be here before long with pertinent up-to-the-minute data!They had three there for several years until recently.
I'm sure David will be here before long with pertinent up-to-the-minute data!They had three there for several years until recently.
They had three there for several years until recently.
And third one launched by Iheart was a dumb move.
Entravisión is Hispanic owned and managed but they do English formats in some markets and are moving into English formats aimed only at Hispanics with a format called "Fuego".Are any of the bidders minority owners? I'm expecting that having a plan to assist minority ownership will be a factor in awarding the license.
Neither put up a great fight against KNCI. KNTY had too wide of a playlist, and a colleague who used to sell at IHM said that KBEB could have done much better with a different morning show. Supposedly (I've never seen numbers; I'm sharing what I was told by a seller), the station had some really good books outside of mornings but 6a-7p was driven down by mornings. Sounds like the play against KNCI, aside from music, is to put up a fight against Pat and Tom who are known and respected in the market.They had three there for several years until recently.
It's 22.9% Hispanic and 8% Black. There are plenty of other western or southwestern markets with higher ethnic populations that support two country stations.Is the Sacramento market too heavily Hispanic and black to successfully support two full country signals?
KNCI is not at the top, being 5th in revenue and, usually, in 25-54. Fragmenting successfull that audience group would conceivably create two stations that are outside the top ten in audience and, eventually, revenue.If anyone other than Bonneville gets the signal, it should be Country. No reason KNCI should be riding high and making all that money by themselves.
Entravision would likely be among the top bidders, also.Looking at the bidders, I would guess Bonneville and EMF among the few willing and able to throw serious cash at 300B.
It isn’t. Ad agencies (besides regional/statewide campaigns) don’t even give you the time of day. K-Hits also has their own challenges being on the upper end of the sales demo. Results Radio is probably the least financially-equipped of the major broadcasters to put an application for the auction, but also have the most to gain by winning.In looking at other Sacramento broadcasters, it looks like Results Radio also submitted an application for the CP. They could benefit from not being a stand-alone. Anyone who has worked at a stand-alone in a large market has experienced the challenge of selling against clusters. I can't imagine it's very easy.
You would think so, but then why are they wasting a signal in the market now?Entravision would likely be among the top bidders, also.
I’ve wondered that myself. My guess is it made more sense to run Jose as part of a sellable cluster (I know Sr. Gleason may challenge me on this, but I’ve considered Ranchera to be Mexican “country” music as it is). If you have several Spanish language stations and a standalone English country station, there’s far less advertising synergy to be had. The folks you’ll get to advertise on a country station may not be interested in advertising on a bilingual CHR or a regional Mexican station, and vice-versa.That move they made in 2019 made no sense. I understand the Fuego launch, but I don't understand them dropping the KNTY country format when they lost a competitor months before. If it was a money issue and their playlist was too broad, they could have put on country programming via satellite.
One thing to distinguish...This Jose is not the same Jose they run in Riverside. I believe it's similar to KVMX AM/FM (Sacramento) , KWIZ ( Santa Ana) and perhaps KFWB (Los Angeles). It sounds much older skewing.I’ve wondered that myself. My guess is it made more sense to run Jose as part of a sellable cluster (I know Sr. Gleason may challenge me on this, but I’ve considered Ranchera to be Mexican “country” music as it is). If you have several Spanish language stations and a standalone English country station, there’s far less advertising synergy to be had. The folks you’ll get to advertise on a country station may not be interested in advertising on a bilingual CHR or a regional Mexican station, and vice-versa.
On a ratings perspective, or with a cluster of primarily English-language formats, blowing up KNTY makes no sense. From a sales standpoint, I’m sure Entravision is not regretting the decision to run Ranchera on their main signal.
Ranchera is "classic country". Banda and Norteña is contemporary country.I’ve wondered that myself. My guess is it made more sense to run Jose as part of a sellable cluster (I know Sr. Gleason may challenge me on this, but I’ve considered Ranchera to be Mexican “country” music as it is).
While ranchera leans old, the fact is that contemporry regional Mexican formats don't play the old ranchera music, so there is a nice "wall" to build there.On a ratings perspective, or with a cluster of primarily English-language formats, blowing up KNTY makes no sense. From a sales standpoint, I’m sure Entravision is not regretting the decision to run Ranchera on their main signal.
I think Sacramento can use an older skewing rhythmic station.