chrish said:When will these morons learn....it almost never works, just confuses the listeners....no one wins. The nitwits doing this are all ADD and ADHD addled and should be force fed ritalin.
I agree with David. The call-letter/format swaps in 97 (98?) were much more complicated, and everybody dealt with it. It was when Clear Channel merged with AM/FM Corp and hoovered-up a bunch of stations and swapped frequencies with whatever company owned KSAN 94.9 at the time - Susquehana, I think. So while the FCC was catching up with the approvals and paperwork, it went something like this:DavidKaye said:chrish said:When will these morons learn....it almost never works, just confuses the listeners....no one wins. The nitwits doing this are all ADD and ADHD addled and should be force fed ritalin.
Almost never works? KSAN was popular on 1450 as an R&B station, popular on 94.9 as a "free-form" station, and as a country station, and is now somewhat popular on 107.7 as an oldies station.
KSOL was popular on 1450 as an R&B station, popular again on 107.7 as an R&B station (the first "urban" station in the Bay Area to make it to #4 in the ratings), and popular again with various Latin music formats on 98.9 where it is today.
Though KOIT was not directly transferred from 93.3 to 96.5 it did find more success on 96.5 than it had earlier.
KYLD survived the transition from "Wild 107.7" to "Wild 94.9" with nary a scratch.
KJOY and KJAX in Stockton swapped as rock listenership moved to FM and easy listening to AM, and both were able to continue their success with their respective formats.
About the only one that fell on its face was KFRC.
DavidKaye said:Almost never works? KSAN was popular on 1450 as an R&B station, popular on 94.9 as a "free-form" station, and as a country station, and is now somewhat popular on 107.7 as an oldies station.
Being a radio nerd, I enjoyed the top of the hour IDs during this period, in which the call letters would be whispered as fast as possible to technically conform with the legal requirements, while they hoped listeners would miss it entirely.
Actually only KJOY calls and AC format moved from AM 1280 to FM 99.3. The KJAX calls went to AM 1280 but the easy listening format of 99.3 actually died in 1989. 1280 became "News/Talk". 99.3 succeeded while poor 1280 continued in spiral downward.DavidKaye said:chrish said:When will these morons learn....it almost never works, just confuses the listeners....no one wins. The nitwits doing this are all ADD and ADHD addled and should be force fed ritalin.
KJOY and KJAX in Stockton swapped as rock listenership moved to FM and easy listening to AM, and both were able to continue their success with their respective formats.