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Alpha Media purge reaches Sherman/Denison/far north Dallas suburbs

They have been purging local hosts in smaller markets lately. At least when they refreshed their corporate logo, they changed the wording below the logo from "Live. Local. <USA or market>." to "On-Air. On-Site. On-Demand." since that live and local part no longer applies in some cases.

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sadly, most of these companies in the radio business are now trying their best to make money off the dying radio industry, podcasting, and streaming of music is slowly killing off Radio's bread & butter and these companies are feeling it's effect, plus the economy around the business itself is not good right now, don't be surprised if these companies ditch live local jocks with voice tracking from bigger markets, syndicated programing or say screw it and let a AI computer hooked up on a cloud server run the station's programming where the only local thing left is EAS alerts from NOAA weather radio or from the Primary EAS station in each market. to those in the radio industry working as on air talent, i'm sorry you will lose your job to a computer cause in the words of the late American Dream Dusty Rhodes, it's hard times
 
... don't be surprised if these companies ditch live local jocks with voice tracking from bigger markets, syndicated programing ...
I don't think anyone will be surprised; it's been happening for years. KEGL has had out-of-market voice tracking from other markets in some shifts for more than 20 years now. Years ago, KDMX had Tampa-based Cindy Spicer track a shift -- one of two dozen stations at the time she tracked. All the local iHeart cluster has had one or more shifts voice tracked out of market for a while. Audacy nationalized evenings on the alt stations a while back; nationalized midday and night shifts on their country and CHRs a while ago.
 
sadly, most of these companies in the radio business are now trying their best to make money off the dying radio industry, podcasting, and streaming of music is slowly killing off Radio's bread & butter and these companies are feeling it's effect, plus the economy around the business itself is not good right now, don't be surprised if these companies ditch live local jocks with voice tracking from bigger markets, syndicated programing or say screw it and let a AI computer hooked up on a cloud server run the station's programming where the only local thing left is EAS alerts from NOAA weather radio or from the Primary EAS station in each market. to those in the radio industry working as on air talent, i'm sorry you will lose your job to a computer cause in the words of the late American Dream Dusty Rhodes, it's hard times
Wow, that's a long single sentence.
The issue for traditional media these days isn't losing the audience, it's losing the customers. The customers are advertisers.
 
Am I the only one who thinks it’s crazy that Alpha is running Westwood One programming on these stations?! If you would create a new market for that area, it would probably be a top 100 market or close. On my drive to Illinois and then back to Texas in May and June, there were plenty of small markets that I drove through with local talent. I feel that Alpha has had a lot of missteps over the past decade or so and could definitely be doing better. If they’re hurting for money so bad, just sell off the stations and be done with it.
 
Am I the only one who thinks it’s crazy that Alpha is running Westwood One programming on these stations?! If you would create a new market for that area, it would probably be a top 100 market or close.

Most of the stations from Sherman/Denison moved into DFW 20-25 years ago. I last lived in DFW shortly before the move-ins happened, but the writing was on the wall. KIKM 96.7 and KXGM 106.5 were working on plans to move into DFW, and, as I was leaving to begin my senior year in college, KTCY 104.9, which was the original KMKT, had launched from Pilot Point as "Fab 105, nothing but Beatles." I heard the station by accident on my drive north along I-35 when my seek stopped, and, when I came back home for Labor Day weekend a few weeks later, it was definitely trying to be a DFW station. While I tend to agree taking programming from a direct competitor is a mistake, especially in an area that size, I get why Sherman/Denison only has one or two clusters trying to serve it. Being an also-ran in DFW will make a lot more money than being the top performer in Sherman/Denison. Plus, you have to compete with DFW stations in that area, even if most of the signals are only available on car radios and good home stereos. Even when I was a teenager 35 years ago, my peers there preferred Y95 to the local Top-40, KDSQ 101.7 (now DFW's Air1 station).

On my drive to Illinois and then back to Texas in May and June, there were plenty of small markets that I drove through with local talent. I feel that Alpha has had a lot of missteps over the past decade or so and could definitely be doing better.

Alpha overpaid for a company that wasn't put together based on any strategy other than "get bigger." It also thought it needed a major expansion in order to go public. There was only one large company being pressured to sell, and Alpha committed to buying it only to decide the timing wasn't right to go public. It decided that too late to back out of the Digity acquisition.

If they’re hurting for money so bad, just sell off the stations and be done with it.

I've been told you could have almost any Alpha market up to and including the entire company for the right price. Portland is about the only market it would be reluctant to sell without getting rid of everything else, and I suspect even it wouldn't be a sacred cow if anyone was willing to break the bank for it. The key words, however, are "for the right price." It wants a comparatively high price for its properties, and nobody is overpaying for radio stations for the time being. Plus, few, if any, have much in the way of tangible assets. Alpha has sold most, if not all, of its towers, and, at least near me, the rent on those towers is roughly $4,000/month. When you consider the average radio station bills about $400,000/year, more than 10% of the revenue would now be going to tower rent. OUCH!
 
Alpha overpaid for a company that wasn't put together based on any strategy other than "get bigger."

Nobody "overpays" for a company. They paid the going rate for stations at that time. The way this works is you have a willing buyer and willing seller. The seller sets a price, and a buyer negotiates. The lenders are also involved, because they know they won't get repaid if the company goes bankrupt. So they are as much to blame for this as the buyer. The problem with these stations, and all of radio in general, is it's a declining asset. So the price you set in 2016 is higher than what it's worth now. Thus the view that they ''overpaid.'' But at the time, they paid what it was worth. A few months later, it was worth less.
 
If you would create a new market for that area, it would probably be a top 100 market or close.
If you were to take the two counties that would likely comprise such a market (Grayson TX and Bryan OK), you would have a market somewhere below #200 in rank. Hard to say exactly since Census data is total population and Nielsen only counts 12+.

Arbitron made Sherman-Denison a radio market... in 1979. They did one survey. The market couldn't sustain it then.

Eastlan surveyed Sherman-Denison seven times from 2011-18, again it ultimately proved unsustainable. In 2018, nearly 65% of the listening went to DFW stations, with KMAD and KMKT accounting for the majority of the 35% of in-market listening.
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The small total population, high percentage of DFW listening and concentration of local ownership combine to make it an unlikely candidate to be surveyed again.
 
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I guess I was thinking more of 97.5 KLAK and including Collin County in this market when I wrote the post, but I guess the other 2 stations in the group don’t cover Collin County as well. You can’t have a county be in 2 markets, correct? But if you could, I think adding Collin County to the mix would push that into a top 100 market or close to one.
 
a lot of people think the sherman-denison market is apart of the dfw market (based on my experiences talking to people) and it is not. also this market (sher-den) still thrives on live local radio, the market is still kind of old fashioned in a way. KJIM AM stopped providing live local radio a year or so ago. now Katy Country and K-LAKE are no longer providing live local radio. KMAD barely does now (based on my listening). The only station i see now in still providing live local radio now is KQDR. They're the only station i know provides full service radio (news/weather/sports/information) in addition to their Hot AC/CHR and Classic CCM (sundays) formatted station. They also showcase different shows with different formats on the weekends as well that has decent listenership. Also a lot of business in the Sherman-Denison area are not happy about what is going on with alpha media. I see their sales tanking within a few months, which could give KQDR a lot of ground to gain on business wise.
 
I was wondering how long he could keep it up at KJIM. At one time KJIM was on the table to be acquired by a Fannin County broadcaster, now Fannin's local isn't really all that local anymore either.
 
a lot of people think the sherman-denison market is apart of the dfw market (based on my experiences talking to people) and it is not. also this market (sher-den) still thrives on live local radio, the market is still kind of old fashioned in a way. KJIM AM stopped providing live local radio a year or so ago. now Katy Country and K-LAKE are no longer providing live local radio. KMAD barely does now (based on my listening). The only station i see now in still providing live local radio now is KQDR. They're the only station i know provides full service radio (news/weather/sports/information) in addition to their Hot AC/CHR and Classic CCM (sundays) formatted station. They also showcase different shows with different formats on the weekends as well that has decent listenership. Also a lot of business in the Sherman-Denison area are not happy about what is going on with alpha media. I see their sales tanking within a few months, which could give KQDR a lot of ground to gain on business wise.

Sorry to squirrel moment this thread.. but i wanted to look up KQDR, see who owned them.. see theire related to a few stations around comanche and brownwood.. and i see the comanche station on 103.9, is a one bay on a short pole in a backyard of someones house

KQDR is lsited as being owned by the prophecy radio group in vail co.. but it has the same phone number, yet different address but same application certifier as KCXX, et all.. william mccutchen.

BTw, the jock on 107.3 didnt sound very live to me... local maybe, but not live... just signed off and did a very generic break
 
I don't see that happening at all. Live local radio really doesn't matter much and the advertisers could care less. So, if you liked KMAD and they dropped the local jocks are you just going to not listen to KMAD because of that. Certainly you'll listen because you are listening for classic rock. Same with other formats. The salespeople still have that same relationship with their clients who buy from them because there's trust and understanding. So, if K-Lake is working for your business, because they drop local jocks and the advertiser says to heck with you, I'm going to an audience that is not my target demo because of it? Really?

Most listeners could care less and advertisers will start caring when results go away, if they truly track things carefully, otherwise they stay with what they know.

Yes, I'm familiar with the 'old fashioned' you speak of (I'm 30 miles from Sherman). I am in radio advertising sales. Most folks I talk to mention Mad Rock and Katy Country. Very few mention K-Lake and I have yet to hear anyone mention KQDR. I'm sure they're popular. Remember Alpha has a greater slice of the audience with their various formats. Advertisers love that kind of reach.
 
a lot of people think the sherman-denison market is apart of the dfw market (based on my experiences talking to people) and it is not.
As Chris posted above, the last time the market was rated, 2/3rds of the listening went to D/FW radio stations over the local Sherman/Denison/Durant stations.
 
Sorry to squirrel moment this thread.. but i wanted to look up KQDR, see who owned them.. see theire related to a few stations around comanche and brownwood.. and i see the comanche station on 103.9, is a one bay on a short pole in a backyard of someones house

KQDR is lsited as being owned by the prophecy radio group in vail co.. but it has the same phone number, yet different address but same application certifier as KCXX, et all.. william mccutchen.

Same owner as KQDR. Prophecy also has a small cluster in Waco (KWOW, KIXT, KWPW). At one point, both KQDR and KIXT down in Waco ran an adult hits format branded as "Doc FM."
BTw, the jock on 107.3 didnt sound very live to me... local maybe, but not live... just signed off and did a very generic break
They also use syndicated programming....

Oddly, years ago (2013-2015?), KQDR used to be the broadcast home for Allen Americans hockey games, which was odd since you can't receive them in Allen due to KMVK 107.5 and Allen not being anywhere near KQDR's class A primary signal contour. If you wanted to hear them, you'd have to go to their website and hit the stream feed.
 
Same owner as KQDR. Prophecy also has a small cluster in Waco (KWOW, KIXT, KWPW). At one point, both KQDR and KIXT down in Waco ran an adult hits format branded as "Doc FM."

They also use syndicated programming....

Oddly, years ago (2013-2015?), KQDR used to be the broadcast home for Allen Americans hockey games, which was odd since you can't receive them in Allen due to KMVK 107.5 and Allen not being anywhere near KQDR's class A primary signal contour. If you wanted to hear them, you'd have to go to their website and hit the stream feed.

The phone number listed on the Sunny Brownwood Facebook page also comes back to some place named Carnes Camp

(325) 721-1230
 
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