Let us not forget how he successfully pranked Fidel Castro and got cussed out by him.He’s kinda entertaining though, I remember him being in Houston for a while on one of those translators. I think he was in LA CALLE.
Let us not forget how he successfully pranked Fidel Castro and got cussed out by him.He’s kinda entertaining though, I remember him being in Houston for a while on one of those translators. I think he was in LA CALLE.
well that was not just him it was another show that he was a part of.Let us not forget how he successfully pranked Fidel Castro and got cussed out by him.
There are issues with the entire sample in Houston, which is why they are not accredited by the MRC.Interesting to see KLTN also with a nice jump in the same book KROI has their own big jump. KTJM and KQQK doing very well also. I'd assume there's still issues with the Hispanic sample, but I'm not sure there's room for 4 Regional Mexican stations in the market long term.
Not sure i agree, Regional mexican would be the genre the umbrella and then you have a long list that comes under it that would still be valid under the term regional mexican.There are issues with the entire sample in Houston, which is why they are not accredited by the MRC.
Remember, "Regional Mexican" is not a very specific term. I can name a number of fully different "Regional Mexican" formats that attract different demos and tastes.
You are talking about music genres. I mean radio formats.Not sure i agree, Regional mexican would be the genre the umbrella and then you have a long list that comes under it that would still be valid under the term regional mexican.
Banda
cumbia you have tons of variations
norteno
norteno light
tierra caliente
tribal
norteno banda
alterado
hyphy
belico
norteno zax
and it keeps going
Seems like more and more markets are seeing CHRs disappear and Hot AC stations become their de facto CHRs. There's so much overlap in the formats' music that I'm not surprised CHR is sinking. What the CHR listeners are hearing that the Hot AC listeners aren't are the hip-hop tracks that would drive off a lot of the female listeners if played on an AC. What the Hot AC listeners are hearing that the CHR listeners aren't are the country crossover or"lite alt" acts like Morgan Wallen and Noah Kahan. Much of what's left is common to both formats or also being played on Urban AC or standard AC.But KLOL is way, way below its former levels. First, they let go a very good PD, and now the whole pop format has collapsed.
I was referring to Spanish language pop formats; in this case KLOL and KAMA.Seems like more and more markets are seeing CHRs disappear and Hot AC stations become their de facto CHRs.
Oops. Sorry.I was referring to Spanish language pop formats; in this case KLOL and KAMA.
Spanish language equivalents of CHR and Hot AC have slower rotations and broader playlists than English language CHRs.
KTRH doesn’t need a translator. The 740 signal is a blowtorch; I’ve read the main lobe aimed over the market is around 200kw ERP. If the format was ever simulcast on FM it would be a full market signal, but there are none available, or iHeart doesn’t want to sacrifice one of their current music FMs.Who woulda thought a major market AM station with no translator could pull a 5+ share in 2025
KTRH doesn’t need a translator. The 740 signal is a blowtorch; I’ve read the main lobe aimed over the market is around 200kw ERP. If the format was ever simulcast on FM it would be a full market signal, but there are none available, or iHeart doesn’t want to sacrifice one of their current music FMs.
Note that sibling KPRC 950 consistently draws in the mid zeroes. The only other AMs of note are sportstalkers on 610 and 790. The rest of the band is niche and/or largely irrelevant.
Is this why IHeart had KISS FM on a translator? Maybe to test if they liked the signal and purchase it in the future? But guess they didn’t like it so they just stopped leasing. Just asking, not saying that’s what really happened.I agree with most of your post, but would like to point out that FM translators in most circumstances don't really fix signal issues... in a lot of cases 250 watt AM station will have a larger coverage area than 250 watt translator unless it is on a mountain or very tall tower. KTRH has a great AM signal in the metro area, but it is still on AM.
The point of a FM translator is that it makes the AM content available where all the listeners are... FM. I don't have recent numbers for Houston in front of me, but say it is 90/10. The 90 percent that listeners of FM may not even know AM is there or at least never even bothers to scan. In these cases, AM signal strength doesn't really matter.
If KTRH ever makes the jump to FM, i agree about a full-power station. Houston is so geographically large, a translator, even a good one like 95.1, just isn't adequate.
You are using AQH numbers to evaluate AM reach when you should look at cume. The percentage of people in Houston who cume AM weekly is on the order of three times what the AQH number indicates.The point of a FM translator is that it makes the AM content available where all the listeners are... FM. I don't have recent numbers for Houston in front of me, but say it is 90/10. The 90 percent that listeners of FM may not even know AM is there or at least never even bothers to scan. In these cases, AM signal strength doesn't really matter.
But you yourself have repeatedly said that advertisers don’t care about cume. A lot of those listeners are of the drive-by variety.You are using AQH numbers to evaluate AM reach when you should look at cume. The percentage of people in Houston who cume AM weekly is on the order of three times what the AQH number indicates.
Advertisers buy based on share (AQH rating to be more precise)... that doesn't mean programmers can't use the other data provided by Nielsen, like reach, to help with strategic decisions.But you yourself have repeatedly said that advertisers don’t care about cume. A lot of those listeners are of the drive-by variety.
That’s a good point. I didn't look at the AQH actually wasn’t using any numbers exactly, just making up an example.You are using AQH numbers to evaluate AM reach when you should look at cume. The percentage of people in Houston who cume AM weekly is on the order of three times what the AQH number indicates.
But this discussion is not about the length of listening spans. It is about whether "anyone listens to AM today". In that case, even if time spent listening is shorter, AM stations get considerable numbers of total listeners.But you yourself have repeatedly said that advertisers don’t care about cume. A lot of those listeners are of the drive-by variety.
It's not quite the same, as one can look at listening levels and time. In particular, the stations that have high preference level usage by listeners are distinguishable.You could argue that NOAA Weather Radio has high cume numbers, although the number listening at any given time is microscopic.