While we are offering program wishes... I wish The Fan would expand their FM footprint. 93.7 is mostly okay inside the perimeter, but they could sure use more power and signal help in Gwinnett, Cobb, and Forsyth.
Agree. It's laughable that one of the best teams in the majors has such a pitiful flagship station.While we are offering program wishes... I wish The Fan would expand their FM footprint. 93.7 is mostly okay inside the perimeter, but they could sure use more power and signal help in Gwinnett, Cobb, and Forsyth.
No kidding! But dare to suggest a pop oldies station and you get admonished.Wait another Urban format in ATL? You don't say....smh
That is complete nonsense..No kidding! But dare to suggest a pop oldies station and you get admonished.
That's quite the reach.What you will get admonished for is being blatantly racist...
So you think me wanting to see a signal incorporate an oldies format is racist?That is complete nonsense..
What you will get admonished for is being blatantly racist... Not every format is meant to be for everyone. If it works in the coverage area it would've been done... Oldies is not being done on FM signals in most markets as it doesn't make money. The Classic Hits audience is in the suburbs where the translators are not strongest. The demos within in the perimeter are who you need to serve on a translator...
No, but saying that if you suggest Oldies as opposed to Urban will lead to admonishing is coded...So you think me wanting to see a signal incorporate an oldies format is racist?
Coded? Nobody said anything about race. I want an oldies station because I'm old, not because I think one format is better than the rest.No, but saying that if you suggest Oldies as opposed to Urban will lead to admonishing is coded...
And you missed the point yet again about where Oldies is not a financially viable format for a large group in any market. It is a flanker on a rimshot or a for a standalone operator barely trying to survive.
iHeart, Cumulus, Radio One, and Audacy Atlanta are putting on formats that they can sell. I know a programmer who pushed for years to do Classic Hits on his station and they couldn't find advertisers that wanted to support it. And that's a 35-54 demo based format. Now focus older and see if you can find a station willing to do it.
I haven't listened to Fox FM for a while but at one time weren't they doing some kind of hybrid "pop" oldies format? I haven't seen them in the ATL ratings but apparently they are buying a couple of stations outside Atlanta so I assume they have some money coming in. They canned Southside Steve for a more "non Atlanta sound". sound.No, but saying that if you suggest Oldies as opposed to Urban will lead to admonishing is coded...
And you missed the point yet again about where Oldies is not a financially viable format for a large group in any market. It is a flanker on a rimshot or a for a standalone operator barely trying to survive.
iHeart, Cumulus, Radio One, and Audacy Atlanta are putting on formats that they can sell. I know a programmer who pushed for years to do Classic Hits on his station and they couldn't find advertisers that wanted to support it. And that's a 35-54 demo based format. Now focus older and see if you can find a station willing to do it.
Correct, they are and they have several translators around the city trying to fill in all the gaps. Apparently what they're doing is working for them, and I am happy to see it. I listen online when I can but having a nice, big signal would be awesome.I haven't listened to Fox FM for a while but at one time weren't they doing some kind of hybrid "pop" oldies format? I haven't seen them in the ATL ratings but apparently they are buying a couple of stations outside Atlanta so I assume they have some money coming in. They canned Southside Steve for a more "non Atlanta sound". sound.
You're correct. FOX FM has a Classic Hits format and is comprised of 4 translators in the Atlanta market, 102.1 in Atlanta, 99.3 in the southern suburbs, 100.1 in the western suburbs, and 100.9 in the northwest suburbs.I haven't listened to Fox FM for a while but at one time weren't they doing some kind of hybrid "pop" oldies format? I haven't seen them in the ATL ratings but apparently they are buying a couple of stations outside Atlanta so I assume they have some money coming in. They canned Southside Steve for a more "non Atlanta sound". sound.
That's harsh. Can the agencies "see" Cumulus station's numbers even if they aren't subscribing? I know Cumulus can't market Neilson numbers.You're correct. FOX FM has a Classic Hits format and is comprised of 4 translators in the Atlanta market, 102.1 in Atlanta, 99.3 in the southern suburbs, 100.1 in the western suburbs, and 100.9 in the northwest suburbs.
The reason they don't show in the ratings is they don't subscribe, and as a non-subscriber, Nielsen won't even let them encode for the PPM.
I don't think so based on what someone high on the food chain at FOX FM told me. You have to feel bad for Cumulus salespeople. IMHO, Q99-7 is sounding super great, and they have no ratings to sell.Can the agencies "see" Cumulus station's numbers even if they aren't subscribing?
The reason they don't show in the ratings is they don't subscribe, and as a non-subscriber, Nielsen won't even let them encode for the PPM.
I hate to ask, I really do, but what the hell does coded mean? I could look it up on google or something, but I'd rather see an answer from someone who actually uses the word.
Well, the owner of FOX FM told me that. He had been speaking with them about subscribing. I’m going to text him for clarification.This doesn't seem correct to me. My understanding is that in PPM markets, Nielsen tries very hard to make sure everyone's encoding, including non-subscribers, because that's how they maximize the universe of people using radio and how they (try to) ensure the overall numbers are accurate. I know there are a lot of small AMs and college stations I've seen on even the deep fringes of PPM markets that end up with encoders even though they're definitely not paying Nielsen for numbers.
Any insight on this, @davideduardo ?
I'm pretty sure even non-subscribers do have the PPM encoder in their audio chain. A non-subscriber told me they had the PPM encoding device in Winston-Salem, NC (Greensboro / Winston-Salem / High Point is a PPM market).Nielsen won't even let them encode for the PPM.
He responded that Nielsen has been doing this for the past 2 years. I guess it’s not impossible that he’s wrong, but I think he knows.Well, the owner of FOX FM told me that. He had been speaking with them about subscribing. I’m going to text him for clarification.
yeah, he certainly knows his own situation. it's surprising, though. i was under the impression that they wanted every station to be encoded, even non subscribers.but I think he knows.