They also made Seattle nighttime ratings. A lot of casual radio listeners during the 60s and 70s were aware of KGO, and listened.Back in the hayday of AM radio, I read somewhere that KGO even showed up in the Medford (OR) night time ratings...
They also made Seattle nighttime ratings. A lot of casual radio listeners during the 60s and 70s were aware of KGO, and listened.Back in the hayday of AM radio, I read somewhere that KGO even showed up in the Medford (OR) night time ratings...
I hear talk on other, standard sports talk shows about betting and odds of teams winning, what Vegas is betting on a team to win, how much a host won or lost. It's not discussed all of the time, but they talk about it a lot more than they did 5 years ago.That was never the point. People talk about odds in sports whether they can bet or not. If you listen to sports talk radio, if you watch ESPN, if you watch or listen to any live sports event, the entire conversation is about beating or covering the spread. This is simply a variation on KNBR. The only difference is they can't legally bet using the app. But they can talk about it.
They absolutely do not care.It looks like their ratings plummeted in 12+ (public) November ratings (1.7 in Sept, 1.6 in October and 0.3 in November). But ownership might not care about these numbers.
Ratings exist for one reason---as a tool to help sell spot advertising. That's it. If your business model is such that spot advertising is not where you make most of your money, ratings are meaningless. >>Don't be surprised if KGO doesn't renew its subscription to Nielsen Audio when it expires.<<
I don't know. It's the cluster that subscribes, but I'm sure Nielsen bases its price on a per station basis, otherwise three-station clusters would pay the same as eight-station clusters in the same city. So, if a cluster decided not to pay for one of its stations, wouldn't it then be as simple as a ban on selling numbers for that station---which, in this case, they probably couldn't anyway?I recall reading (maybe from David) that if a cluster owner subscribes to the ratings "book" for any of their stations, they're subscribing for all stations in that cluster. It's only logical that if you're already getting the book each month and selling based off it, there's no way to segregate one station that you're paying for from another that you're not, especially when the sales team is selling the cluster, not just individual stations.
(By the way, greetings, fellow Earthlings.)
I don't know anything about Nielsen pricing either, but it seems logical that their pricing would factor in such parameters as (a) number of stations in a market, (b) number of stations in a particular cluster, (c) size of the ad pie, and (d) the totality of a corporation's subscribing business (i.e., volume discounts to big subscribers). But I doubt they're going to allow any subscriber to cherry-pick which stations in their portfolio they're not going to pay for, regardless of what they represent to Nielsen. Ratings data is fungible and actionable, regardless of what they "promise."I don't know. It's the cluster that subscribes, but I'm sure Nielsen bases its price on a per station basis, otherwise three-station clusters would pay the same as eight-station clusters in the same city. So, if a cluster decided not to pay for one of its stations, wouldn't it then be as simple as a ban on selling numbers for that station---which, in this case, they probably couldn't anyway?
I hear you. This is where we need David or BigA, who have current understanding of how Nielsen does its station deals.I don't know anything about Nielsen pricing either, but it seems logical that their pricing would factor in such parameters as (a) number of stations in a market, (b) number of stations in a particular cluster, (c) size of the ad pie, and (d) the totality of a corporation's subscribing business (i.e., volume discounts to big subscribers). But I doubt they're going to allow any subscriber to cherry-pick which stations in their portfolio they're not going to pay for, regardless of what they represent to Nielsen. Ratings data is fungible and actionable, regardless of what they "promise."
When you say, "...which, in this case, they probably couldn't anyway", I presume that's specific to KGO and their sports betting format? My response (with the proviso that I've listened only for short bursts since their switchover) is that they run CBS Sports Radio for some number of hours a day, and those feeds have breaks for local avails, so somebody is (or will eventually be) trying their best to sell time to fill those avails, just like with any other network. Is it Cumulus's intention for all that inventory to just go as bonus spots for KNBR advertisers, or just take whatever filler comes over the satellite? Or will the time eventually (after some initial settling-in period) be priced based on who's listening? If the latter, where's the data going to come from? That, to me, is why Nielsen can't treat KGO, or any other individual station within a larger cluster, as a freebie.
Group deals are done for the entire company, not market by market.I hear you. This is where we need David or BigA, who have current understanding of how Nielsen does its station deals.
This is the sort of discussion they will have to lower the corporate ratings cost at renewal time: "Hey, we've got all these sports betting stations that don't sell by ratings so we want to see a little price reduction overall..."And yes, I meant specific to KGO and their sports betting format. And while they do have spot avails, they're not gonna do that business on the basis of a 0.3 in Nielsen.
As a kid in the 70s, I often listened to KGO when growing up in SoCal. I really listened to it from Orange County during the '89 quake. Most people I knew were aware of KGO and listened some of the time.A lot of casual radio listeners during the 60s and 70s were aware of KGO, and listened.
For quite a few years, 660 is going to be of value to The Fan. It's immense signal reaches parts of the New York City Metro Survey Area that no NYC FM fully covers, and the limited cost of transmitter power and maintenance is a very small price to pay to enhance the metro area coverage of the combo.I think other talk stations will flip to sports and sports betting format down the road , I can see the low rated talk stations ditching to that format , wpht in Philly could see that happen , wfan 660 am may air that format and split from the 101.9 feed.
They also had a 5Kw AM "repeater" on 790 (?) in Eureka, CA for several years. I'm not sure what the arrangement was, it wasn't owned by ABC but it carried KGO programming fulltime.Back in the hayday of AM radio, I read somewhere that KGO even showed up in the Medford (OR) night time ratings...
Not owned- Just an agreement.They also had a 5Kw AM "repeater" on 790 (?) in Eureka, CA for several years. I'm not sure what the arrangement was, it wasn't owned by ABC but it carried KGO programming fulltime.
Decades ago there was an FM station authorized to re-broadcast KGO up in that same general area...don't remember what it was though...Not owned- Just an agreement.
KGOE. 1480
If WFAN-AM was situated on its own parcel of land, using its own unshared tower array, then maybe the value of the land would be worth more than the enterprise value of it as the AM side of a simulcast. But WFAN is a Class I-A, single-tower non-directional, and it is diplexed on its tower with co-owned WCBS-AM, also a I-A, and so far that remains a stand-alone AM signal. So the transmitters and towers (primary and aux) aren't going anywhere anytime soon, and High Island itself is a small, privately owned spit of land off City Island, east of The Bronx in the Long Island Sound. (Previously, High Island was owned directly by CBS, but at this point it might be Audacy, or leased by Audacy from CBS as part of the acquisition/spinoff deal.) So even if anyone was interested in buying it for development, it's not too likely it has much potential to be anything more than another Gardiner's Island, an sma;; private enclave for a very rich person or family.For quite a few years, 660 is going to be of value to The Fan. It's immense signal reaches parts of the New York City Metro Survey Area that no NYC FM fully covers, and the limited cost of transmitter power and maintenance is a very small price to pay to enhance the metro area coverage of the combo.
Here's a perspective that may help.
Think of AM as like a shopping mall. Now let's go back to 1978 in San Francisco and look at AM Mall. It's an old-school, air conditioned, indoor mall.
View attachment 3678
1. KFRC-AM (Top 40): 8.4
2. KGO-AM (Talk): 7.6
3. KSFO-AM (A/C): 6.5
4. KCBS-AM (News): 5.8
5. KFOG-FM (Beautiful): 4.4
6. KIOI-FM (A/C): 3.9
7. KABL-AM (Beautiful): 3.5
8. KSFX-FM (Disco): 3.4
9. KNBR-AM (A/C): 3.3
10. KDIA-AM (R&B): 3.2
Seven of the ten hottest stores are in AM Mall. They draw people in and while they're there, those people might dial around the other stores.
Let's flash forward to 1985---seven years later and 37 years ago. How's AM Mall doing?
View attachment 3679
1. KGO-AM (Talk): 8.8
2. KCBS-AM (News): 5.3
3. KYUU-FM (some called it A/C, some called it CHR): 4.1
4. KIOI-FM (same as KYUU---if these were A/C, they were very hot A/Cs): 3.5
5. KSOL-FM (R&B): 3.4
6. KABL-FM (Beautiful): 3.3
7. KSAN-FM (Country): 3.2
8. KFRC-AM (CHR): 3.1
9. KNBR-AM (A/C): 2.8
10. KFOG-FM (AOR): 2.7
10. KRQR-FM (AOR): 2.7
Uh-oh. Only four of the hottest stores are in AM Mall now. KGO and KCBS seem to be hanging in, but big stores like KFRC and KSFO aren't bringing people to AM Mall anymore, and that's depressed KNBR's numbers and pushed KABL out of the top 10 (11 because it's a tie).
Maybe it'll get better. Maybe just those big anchor stores (KGO, KCBS) will be enough to keep the mall going. Y'know, like Macy's and Nordstrom.
Well, we know how that wound up.
View attachment 3680
Did Macy's suddenly suck? Nordstrom? Bloomingdale's? No. They starved because people stopped shopping where their stores were---AM Mall. So, no. Compelling content won't bring people back to AM anymore than solid stores saved malls.
A lot of places have re-purposed their malls, turning them into "power centers". What was once a Nordstrom is now a Walmart. And what was once KGO Newstalk 810 is now a sports betting station.