AM radio is like an old shopping mall with only a handful of stores still open. How many stations on the AM dial are still trying to compete for an audience? KDKA, WJAS, KQV ... and the list starts to falter. (I could make a case for people like Frankie Day on KFB or Candy & Mike on WEDO, but those more properly are specialty shows and are offset by the paid programs airing the rest of the day.)
WZUM has opened another store. It's not a big store, but it's open for business, and hopefully offering a product that listeners like. Bishop Loran Mann is about to open yet another store on 1360. If his Gospel format draws more Black listeners to the AM band, that's more foot traffic in the mall and more good news for AM radio.
I used to say that you had to work twice as hard with AM to get half the results you would with FM. Today, you might have to work five times as hard for one-fifth the result. But I still hold the axiom to be true. You have to put something into AM radio to get something out of it.
C.
WZUM has opened another store. It's not a big store, but it's open for business, and hopefully offering a product that listeners like. Bishop Loran Mann is about to open yet another store on 1360. If his Gospel format draws more Black listeners to the AM band, that's more foot traffic in the mall and more good news for AM radio.
I used to say that you had to work twice as hard with AM to get half the results you would with FM. Today, you might have to work five times as hard for one-fifth the result. But I still hold the axiom to be true. You have to put something into AM radio to get something out of it.
C.