EJ204 said:
EMF obviously knows that KLTY is one of the forerunners of the Christian AC format. It's been doing the format with high ratings for decades.
But KLTY has local DJs and runs like a real Dallas radio station. Air 1, along with K-Love, Way-FM, Smile-FM, etc. are all nationally syndicated formats with no local programming, except maybe for some local PSAs.
Also KTCY is not a full Dallas-Fort Worth signal. KLTY is.
But I guess they see Dallas, a city already receptive to Christian music programming, as another market to go into. I personally don't understand the Christian music format. I don't know why someone, even a Christian, would want to listen to a radio format where all the music deals witn only one subject all the time, and where secular hits are almost never heard.
One good thing about this is that it proves that a station, once moved to foreign language programming, is not forever trapped in that black hole. It can flip back to something English speaking audience can understand.
KLTY got trapped into the praise and worship CCM trap that 99% of the CCM stations in the country got caught in. It was a comfortable, safe, easy format that was supposed to be non-offensive to those fire and brimstone, anti-CCM, King James only idiot preachers. The stations didn't get calls from those radicals, non-profits had steady income from checks, ratings were high with soccer moms. The problem is - "safe for the family" had a hole in it, starting at about 12 years old. Those kids found the music boring. They grew up, and grew up not listening to Christian radio. Now, they are a coveted demographic because they are earning big bucks. And listening to secular radio instead of Christian radio. I have been saying this for almost 20 years - if you don't tell the church of tomorrow you care today, you won't have a church tomorrow. Now, the bland, boring praise and worship debacle is coming back to haunt Christian radio - big time. It may have been safe, but it was also - and is still - boring and uncreative.
I am speaking from Houston - where KSBJ also got caught up in the same trap. Houston was a market ready for better Christian format, more up tempo, more like secular top-40. EMF saw the format hole, and moved in to exploit it. I hear that they consider the move-in to be a success. Word of mouth is spreading like wildfire, I expect Air-1 may be showing up in the ratings soon. Dallas is a different market, you have KVRK which is doing a tremendous job of filling the need for a Christian rock station. But - that audience is small because it is hard core male 18-34 - the same ones who would like secular rock. Not the station for run of the mill teens and a lot of early 20's. So there is a format hole in the Christian audience in Dallas, one EMF is exploiting. I expect it will not draw that many listeners away from KLTY or KVRK, but will attract Christian listeners who are currently dissatisfied with both existing stations. Incidentally, Houston also has a Christian rock solution, but only on KSBJ HD-2 and a few translators. Much of the Houston area cannot receive it over the air, which leaves Houston's Christian rock audience underserved unless they stream or DX from translators on the other side of town.
The Christian audience is a difficult one - far from accepting a "single message in every song", it is fragmented into doctrinal and denominational groups. If you program music on it, you have to walk a fine line on the lyrical content, and the audience will turn on an artist with a lifestyle inconsistent with Christianity much more severely than a secular audience turns against artists who mess up. It is really easy to extend that lyrical constraint into musical tempo, which was the praise and worship trap that devastated CCM radio for almost two decades. But it doesn't have to be that way - conventional Christian messages, or at least messages on secular subjects that still reflect Christian values are present in every musical style - and those artists are finally being heard. CCM formats long suppressed, like Christian rock, Christian rap, and Christian hip-hop are finally being heard via streaming, which breaks the monopoly Nashville's praise and worship music juggernaut had. Once Christian young people hear the formats geared to them, they seldom go back to praise and worship radio, and will vote with their pocketbooks when pledge drives and commercials air.