EnbyCee said:
I bring it up because it's the same frequency (94.7). Every market has a signal that never succeeds. In LA it's the old KZLA signal. ABC spent millions of dollars trying to compete with WKQX for the New Rock/Alternative format and failed.
Except they took the cheap route on morning drive where the Zone was concerned. Nothing they had could take on Mancow and Stern. Ironically, less than a year after WZZN flipped, Stern was gone to Sirius and Mancow was off in Chicago.
Every format change they did on that station for about 20 years led to direct competition with an established station in the same format.....Z95 vs. B96, WLS-FM Talks vs. the Loop, Kicks Country vs. US99, CD 94.7 vs. WCKG, Zone vs. Q101. All failed. Finally they hit upon oldies with no competition, and it's still struggling. Maybe it truly is Chicago's cursed frequency, though AM 1000 is also in the running.
Eh, there's no such thing as a "cursed" signal, just years and years of poor management. Let's start with Z95. A cheap knockoff of a New York station that would have probably done OK, had it actually sounded like the station they were trying to emulate at the time. There were Hot Hits stations in BFE Indiana that sounded better. No one wanted to spend the money to make it #1.
WLS-FM was trying to compete with WLUP. Except that WLUP was a rock/FM talker, not a just simulcast of a News/Talk product. Two different types of listener altogether.
Kicks Country was another bad idea, taking on a heritage country station in one of the largest markets in America. I mean US99 had, what, a thirteen year head start on them?
CD94.7 was OK, just didn't bill.
Onto The Zone. Started off to kill a suburban rimshot competitor. Again, probably would have succeeded had it sounded anything like the competitor. They found out that few people listen to 80's when the station doesn't *sound* like it's from the 80's. So it slooowwwlly morphed into a sort of "classicnewwave80salternative". Wouldn't have been bad as an HD-2 for a true 80's "Zone", had they actually been able to pull it off and HD existed in 2001. After that is a blur, no one was even sure what the hell kind of music they played, and they usually had a tweak planned for right after the next legal ID. Billy should have considered himself lucky to break a 1.0. They may have spent millions, but generally target demos were people who don't carry diaries and those with limited income. Needless to say, billing was through the roof. Also managed to ruin a halfway decent competitor in the process, so all was not lost.
We end the saga with Scott Shannon. If there is a cheaper way to run an oldies station in Market #3, Citadel's going to find it. Don't be suprised if you start hearing a lot more of Scott again, and I'm sure our favorite Nappy Ho is going to fit right in here in Chi-Town.