Actually, WPTT had received a full point until recently. When Bowyer was there they usually pulled in 1.5 and WPTT, I would argue, was a player in that it gave listeners an alternative talk format.
You said it yourself- WJAS and WEAE have found audiences. So has WAMO-AM, which by your line of thinking would obviously not make it (WHAT? Urban talk in a market that is only 7.9 percent black? How could that ever succeed?) and, to a certain extent, KQV.
Finally, I haven't listened to WURP since they dropped Imus. That was two years ago.
But way to hold a grudge and stay with current events. Will you accuse Radio Realist and I of being homosexual lovers again to keep up with this theme?
I'd tell you about the changes that are going on to improve AM frequencies in the future, and perhaps an additional comment about how AM, while certainly not the band it was in the 1960s, is still a home for talk radio and sports fans and community radio (WJPA in Washington, for instance), but why waste the time?
You said it yourself- WJAS and WEAE have found audiences. So has WAMO-AM, which by your line of thinking would obviously not make it (WHAT? Urban talk in a market that is only 7.9 percent black? How could that ever succeed?) and, to a certain extent, KQV.
Finally, I haven't listened to WURP since they dropped Imus. That was two years ago.
But way to hold a grudge and stay with current events. Will you accuse Radio Realist and I of being homosexual lovers again to keep up with this theme?
I'd tell you about the changes that are going on to improve AM frequencies in the future, and perhaps an additional comment about how AM, while certainly not the band it was in the 1960s, is still a home for talk radio and sports fans and community radio (WJPA in Washington, for instance), but why waste the time?