> As the only two true rock stations in Columbia (forget that
> 93.9 "rocker" that plays Bryan Adams ballads), WMFX and WARQ
> make great money. They own the male demos 18-54 combined.
> They spend zero money in marketing and have no parttime
> announcers. They run way too many commercials, at the
> expense of ratings. But that said, they don't have to do
> anything until they get a direct competitor. As for Fox, as
> John Boy & Billy goes, so do they. And both stations are
> owned by a company that mainly owns Urbans. Where is there
> a hole for them to do more Urban?
>
Great observations! Looking at the ##'s I was surprised at how little "sign on" kick WLTY got. Usually you put something new on and you get a really big spike. Didn't seem to happen. Of course, WLTY could account for the drop in Fox.
I am amazed about how many units WMFX and WARQ run an hour during prime dayparts. The only time I have heard more spots was when I worked for a station in a resort area and during the height of the summer season we'd run up to 18 minutes of spots broken down into 4 sets.
The urban market I think is probably now as saturated as a piece of French toast. It is only a matter of time before someone takes a run at a combined Fox and ARQ with a mainstream Rock/Classic Rock Hybrid (think WARQ c. 1992) or at WNOK with a tight CHR.