gabigley1 said:Which one? 1480 WDJO/WCIN seems to be the best guess now.
JeffDavis said:I checked the Kenton County PVA site, and the current assessment for that property is $96,000. It was $277,000 under Plessinger and $303,700 under Davidson. That was in 2006.
I'll give them $125,000. Is that too high?
Cincinnati Kid said:With regards to WSAI being heard over a long distance in the 1960's - Back in 1964, I went to Harlan, Ky. with a friend who grew up there. That night, we were in his friend's car and he had one of the push-buttons on his car radio set to 1360. WSAI came in there with only an occasional drift from time to time.
I don't profess to be a sage businessman, but I do profess to not invest in anything with a payment book attached to it. How does it change the equation if someone walks in & plops down X number of dollars and buys himself a radio station? What would say $500K draw in a money market? My calculator says a little over $1000 a month. Could that same $500K cash flow better than a grand a month after expenses invested in this radio facility? If so, it may be a better yielding investment than a money market fund, although the safety of the principal is questionable. If it could cash flow as little as 5 grand a month, it may be a remarkably good choice. Not having a nut to crack changes the whole outlook IMHO.Bizman said:The WCVG deal seems as difficult to work as the WPFB-AM deal. At $750,000 how could you ever make it with a station that is break even? Why would a station that sold for $472,500 less then a year ago and is break even now, go for $750,000? I don't understand what is different now? Am I missing something? I'm trying to understand the economics of radio and I'm having trouble understanding why anyone would purchase a business that doesn't or can't make money. What am I missing?
Thanks for your help.
Cincinnati Kid said:1360 could really gain some interest by featuring local high school sports and play-by-play. Here we are in February and no one carries local high school basketball games of Cincinnati and suburban area schools. To me, it is a sad void.
Cincinnati Kid said:1360 could really gain some interest by featuring local high school sports and play-by-play. Here we are in February and no one carries local high school basketball games of Cincinnati and suburban area schools. To me, it is a sad void.
KevinFodor said:Cincinnati Kid said:At night, in some spots even in the Greater Cincinnati area, WSAI - 1360-AM - has reception problems. It makes me wonder how that station had the ratings it did back in the 1960's when they had rock music.
Very easy answer, Kid...less urban sprawl in the 1960's...even in Cincinnati.
What are today considered, "northern suburbs", were called "Hamilton", "Fairfield", etc. And most back then looked at those as areas separate of Cincinnati. (Which is why WMOH survived for many years as a "top 40" station even being in the shadow of WSAI.)
Same is true in Columbus...where WCOL-AM at 1230 blanketed what was "the city" back in the 1960's...today, because of urban sprawl, it's tough to hear in Hilliard and Dublin at night these days...
There's lots of engineering reasons for this, but, alas, I am not and have never called myself anything remotely like an engineer...so those of you who are, please explain the technical aspects if you haven't already...
pioneer71 said:We have spoken about WSAI and WPFB AM but what do you think WMOH would be worth today? Their day time programming is the weakest on the dial. The only thing they have going for it is their high school coverage. That Bob that does the high schools is good. Why do they call themselves a Cincinnati station when they do their I.D. when their ratings are so bad.
Their local news coverage is weak. They don't seem to deliver breaking news like they used to. You used to be able to count on them at times of emergency but you can no longer depend on them. There was a time when the station took pride in their news coverage. What happened?
It is a real plus they are streaming and I like their processing. However, the local morning show has no direction. It seems they talk only about what interests the main host Chris something. It really is the weakest morning show in the market by far.
Someone who realy understands how to run a local AM station could make money. What format would you put on WMOH to put them in a better position to compete?