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1110 New Format

Are they still in he building with WBTV even if the owner is different?

Not that it matters but a WBTV simulcast would be a good idea.
WBT and WBTV are still in the same building at One Julian Price Place, despite no longer being co-owned. And back in the 80's and early 90's the WBTV evening newscast was simulcast on 1110 at 6pm.
 
Remember all the times it was 70 and sunny and WBT ran the VO proclaiming themselves your emergency situation station?
If they don’t offer live programming this weekend on the AM side with one of the worst ice storms we’ve had in decades I’d offer it’s time to have their license stripped for failure to serve the community.
Back during Hurricane Hugo when folks lost power they were able to tune to 1110 for emergency information, if they had batteries for their radio. I guess now they can tune to 107.9 if necessary. The various talent mentioned today they were planning special weekend broadcasts as warranted. I know the morning show was planned to originate from the US Capitol in DC today, but last minute Bo and Beth turned around in Virginia and returned to Charlotte for special storm coverage.
 
I imagine 107.9 will now be marketed as "your emergency situation station." and then next summer as your "summer vacation station." and come thanksgiving "your holiday vacation station." and any other alliteration they can think of. It's all marketing. Obviously i mean this with tongue-firmly-in-cheek, because a news-talker is more important during emergency situations than during summer vacation. But radio programmers have done this for over 40 years.
On 1110, it'll be the uninterrupted loop we can hear now. There will be no change, and certainly no license revocation. I imagine the first day of the February book we'll hear something different. I have changed my sports-talk simulcast prediction to something more on line with Radio One's mission statement. I suspect it's about to get real up in here.
 
Let's be realistic here.

If the entire purpose of Radio One's format swaps is to get the WBT news-talk audience on FM, then a major news event is exactly when they want 107.9 at front of mind. Putting that coverage back on 1110 after they've spent weeks making sure the existing audience knows to go to 107.9 would be entirely counterproductive.

And regardless of the extended reach of 1110 outside Charlotte, the only listeners Radio One can sell to advertisers are the ones IN the Charlotte market, all of which can get 107.9 just fine. Radio One doesn't care if you're listening to WBT in Spartanburg or Asheville or anywhere else.

If there's an EAS activation, it will run on 1110, but that's all that will run on 1110. There's no FCC requirement that any licensee do more than that for emergency coverage.
Which I completely understand your point but what happens if 107.9 goes down because of weather?
 
Which I completely understand your point but what happens if 107.9 goes down because of weather?

Why would it go down? It's actually much easier to maintain aux/backup facilities for an FM station than it is for an AM.

WBT-FM has a 38 kW auxiliary facility licensed at Spencer Mountain. If their main site goes down, one push of a button turns on the aux and 107.9 stays on the air.
 
Why would it go down? It's actually much easier to maintain aux/backup facilities for an FM station than it is for an AM.

WBT-FM has a 38 kW auxiliary facility licensed at Spencer Mountain. If their main site goes down, one push of a button turns on the aux and 107.9 stays on the air.
38kW of FM won't cover the area 50K of AM does. Sorry, I just think it'd be hypocritical of them to be playing elevator music on a 50kW signal while we're potentially going through one of the worst winter events we've had in over 20 years. Where I work, our mantra is serve the viewer. This isn't.
 
38kW of FM won't cover the area 50K of AM does. Sorry, I just think it'd be hypocritical of them to be playing elevator music on a 50kW signal while we're potentially going through one of the worst winter events we've had in over 20 years. Where I work, our mantra is serve the viewer. This isn't.

Outside the metro charlotte area, what 1110 covers doesnt matter. 107.9 covers everything that matters and then some
 
38kW of FM won't cover the area 50K of AM does. Sorry, I just think it'd be hypocritical of them to be playing elevator music on a 50kW signal while we're potentially going through one of the worst winter events we've had in over 20 years. Where I work, our mantra is serve the viewer. This isn't.

Who says the aux signal won't cover? This is the 60 dBu contour, and in the real world it will be very listenable for 20 to 30 more miles, easily.

It's 2026, not 1960. There's no actual audience at a distance trying to tune into a scratchy AM signal when there's a nice loud FM that comes in better. Whatever emergency information WBT conveys is going to be entirely Charlotte-centric, anyway. They're not going to be giving out vital information for Spartanburg or Asheville or wherever.

There's still this idea that emergency information can only be relevant if it's on AM, and in an era when so much of the audience doesn't even know AM exists, it's hard for me to see how that plays out in the real world.

In short - serving the listener means meeting the listener where they are now. The whole point of moving WBT to 107.9 was exactly that, wasn't it?
 

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38kW of FM won't cover the area 50K of AM does. Sorry, I just think it'd be hypocritical of them to be playing elevator music on a 50kW signal while we're potentially going through one of the worst winter events we've had in over 20 years. Where I work, our mantra is serve the viewer. This isn't.
But the ground conductivity in that area of the south is between bad and awful. A good example is WSB in Atlanta, where their FM does just about as well as the AM.
 
Correct, ground conductivity is really is bad down here. It's not like the midwest where WHO, WLW, KMOX, WBBM, et al carry far beyond the FM stations in their markets. When Asheville's WWNC received well-deserved press for their coverage after Helene, most stories ignored the fact that most listeners were actually tuned to the simulcast on WKSF 99.9.
 
But the ground conductivity in that area of the south is between bad and awful. A good example is WSB in Atlanta, where their FM does just about as well as the AM.
It’s interesting you mention that. When I lived in PA, I could get WSB clear as could be just about every night. No noise, no fade, like it was a local for me.
Now I live in Charlotte? Hardly ever get it.
Not sure if they’re nulled to the east to protect something, but just seems odd I’m 8 hours closer and barely get it.
 
It’s interesting you mention that. When I lived in PA, I could get WSB clear as could be just about every night. No noise, no fade, like it was a local for me.
Now I live in Charlotte? Hardly ever get it.
Not sure if they’re nulled to the east to protect something, but just seems odd I’m 8 hours closer and barely get it.
I'm in Charlotte and can hear WSB 750 just fine at night.
 
38kW of FM won't cover the area 50K of AM does. Sorry, I just think it'd be hypocritical of them to be playing elevator music on a 50kW signal while we're potentially going through one of the worst winter events we've had in over 20 years. Where I work, our mantra is serve the viewer. This isn't.
While I agree in spirit the storm will be mostly a weekend event. They won't be Live & Local at that time no matter if it's AM or FM.
 
It’s interesting you mention that. When I lived in PA, I could get WSB clear as could be just about every night. No noise, no fade, like it was a local for me.
Now I live in Charlotte? Hardly ever get it.
Not sure if they’re nulled to the east to protect something, but just seems odd I’m 8 hours closer and barely get it.
You are talking about night AM signals that "skip´" into distant areas. Unfortunately, AM listening, in severe decline in daytime hours, is negligible at night. And it is subject to static, lightening bursts and fading. Who wants that if they can get clean and clear audio on FM or, even better, on their phone or tablet from a stream?

Most of the signal at night of WBT (AM) goes in directions that protect the co-channel AM in Omaha, but at 80 miles you may get groundwave vs. skywave cancellation, making reception rather obnoxious.
 
Back during Hurricane Hugo when folks lost power they were able to tune to 1110 for emergency information, if they had batteries for their radio. I guess now they can tune to 107.9 if necessary. The various talent mentioned today they were planning special weekend broadcasts as warranted. I know the morning show was planned to originate from the US Capitol in DC today, but last minute Bo and Beth turned around in Virginia and returned to Charlotte for special storm coverage.
That included people in Savannah. They have another station at 107.9, even if WBT's signal could go that far.
 
Simulcasting TV, to me, wouldn't make much sense in this case because you're showing maps, etc. which obviously won't translate to radio.
Nevertheless, it has been a common practice over the years for those who can't watch TV. I don't know if it's still done but there have been ordinary newscasts that did this. I was annoyed by not being able to listen to America's Best Music from 5 to 5:30. No, I don't know why it wasn't the 6:00 news. Maybe more people would be on the road without a TV at 5.

This was even done by a 100,000-watt FM at one time in the Greensboro area.
 
Nevertheless, it has been a common practice over the years for those who can't watch TV. I don't know if it's still done but there have been ordinary newscasts that did this. I was annoyed by not being able to listen to America's Best Music from 5 to 5:30. No, I don't know why it wasn't the 6:00 news. Maybe more people would be on the road without a TV at 5.

This was even done by a 100,000-watt FM at one time in the Greensboro area.
And then you had all the TV stations on channel 6 back in the analog days, whose audio signal was right around 87.5 mHz. You could pick it up on many car radios. I used to listen to WECT Wilmington when I would be on the way to my parents' house in Myrtle Beach on Friday evenings, and could listen both to the WECT news and NBC Nightly News. I always appreciated that. (And WCBS Newsradio 880 used to simulcast the CBS Evening News, don't recall if it was 6:30 or 7 pm. That was good too.)

Just guessing, I would say that newscasters realize that a certain percentage of their viewers are either blind or have low vision, and keep their news shows reasonably accessible to them. Normally, weather maps are more or less described as well as being depicted.
 
I was annoyed by not being able to listen to America's Best Music from 5 to 5:30.

Here we go again.

Chimp, with all due respect to you as a listener, one of these days you really need to wake up to the fact that radio stations are not programmed to your specific wants and tastes.

The constant stream of "I don't like" and "this annoys me" is getting really tedious. The radio business does not revolve around you, and RD exists as a general discussion board, not as your personal gripe outlet.

I really, really wish you could find a way to look at the business from a broader perspective. I'm sure you have a lot of thoughts that might be useful, but they unfortunately get lost in all the noise from your complaining.
 


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