I just don’t understand why Audacy didn’t bring back the Lake format.
I’m not sure why I would leave for another station that is playing basically the same music on a weaker signal.
The Lake was more attractive to college educated NPR listeners. Call them Old Hippies if you want, but what is 97 Rock.? Old Blue Collar white dudes. The Wolf/Coyote/Rodent Country format will not attract a niche or any passionate listeners. Sales people always blame the programming when it is actually "sales problem". When The Wolf gets a 1 share, tell us how attractive it will be...It all comes down to the question of whether they'll be "playing basically the same music on a weaker signal." If they differentiate themselves by targeting a segment of the country audience they have a chance to do well. Country is no longer a monolithic format. Like rock, there are multiple eras and multiple musical styles to choose from. They can carve out a niche if it's properly programmed. That niche is likely to get an audience that's more attractive to advertisers than the ancient hippie Lake format.
When The Wolf gets a 1 share, tell us how attractive it will be...
In this case, WYRK wins ↑ Bingo![The Wolf]...will be programmed by another Wolf station’s PD, with talent from other Wolf stations in the company.
I’m not sure why I would leave for another station that is playing basically the same music on a weaker signal." Bingo!
Invalid comparison to Buffalo.Audacy has a Wolf station in Seattle that competes against Hubbard's Bull. They each play similar music in different combinations, each have an amount of national programming, and they each get very similar numbers.
If a station loses TSL, they lose share.What happens when WYRK goes into a commercial break? Do you sit through 8 minutes or more of commercials, or push a button to hear more music? In markets where there are two country stations playing basically the same music, we see a chunk of listeners choose the latter. So the new station may not hurt 12+ numbers, but it could hurt TSL.
Invalid comparison to Buffalo.
Excellent pointIf gets ratings, it's an intelligent decision. It's not about winning awards, it's about making money.
he will type a lot, repeat the same stuffKnowing him...a LOT.
Lots of "ifs" in this. If The Wolf gets a 2 share and WYRK gets a 7 share, it's still no contest. No ad agency will be interested in The Wolf unless it can prove its delivering ratings in the desired demos. Even a 2 share won't guarantee any significant revenue. WYRK will be the better value and can cut their rates.OK, how about Boston? You have a full market heritage WKLB that was challenged by the weaker WBWL. The Bull carries mostly iHeart syndicated shows, and it still manages to get a 2 share in a very competitive non-country market. I think if Audacy can get a 2 or 2.5 share with this signal, they'll do well. Certainly better than they're doing now.
Even a 2 share won't guarantee any significant revenue.
They are not doing this to satisfy demand. They are doing it to use a smaller signal to fragment another station that garners a lot of market billing.Audacy is fooling themselves with this format choice. There's no demand for a 2nd Country station in Buffalo. They have chosen to learn another painful lesson in futility...