Bloomberg will be on AM 1200.
raccoonradio said:Ah, file under that's not funny...
Joseph_Gallant said:Doubtful: WXKS-1200. I think if they're going to move away from their automated 24/7 standup comedy format, it would be to 24/7 Fox Sports Radio, which WXKS owner Clear Channel has a stake in.
raccoonradio said:Ah, file under that's not funny...
http://bostonherald.com/business/business_markets/2013/02/new_format_for_clear_channel_s_wxks
Fri 12:01 am also on 94.5's HD2
tvradiogeek said:why not move comedy to 101.7? and evolution to wxks fm hd-2???
DavidZ said:What does this mean for Barry Armstrong's network of Business Orientated stations including WBNW? How do the signals compare in the financial district of Boston? Maybe that is why Barry brokered time to Michael Graham?
JIBGUY said:What will happen to 1120/1390, you ask? Probably nothing. The business format is not ratings-conscious. Time is sold there, and as long as there are competitors to Bloomberg, weak or strong, there will be business-programming renters on 1120/1390.
Eli Polonsky said:JIBGUY said:What will happen to 1120/1390, you ask? Probably nothing. The business format is not ratings-conscious. Time is sold there, and as long as there are competitors to Bloomberg, weak or strong, there will be business-programming renters on 1120/1390.
Those are also not really Boston signals. Any on-air listeners to 1120 are mainly in the metro-northwest suburbs and highway office parks between Route 128 and Route 495 north of the Pike to Route 2, maybe some in the inner west suburbs within 128, but few in Boston. 1390 is barely audible in Boston, it's a southeastern Massachusetts signal.
Those two signals cover areas that 1200 doesn't cover very well (especially at night), and neither one covers 1200's primary area of metro Boston well, so 1200 going Bloomberg should have little effect on 1120 and 1390's on-air listenership, the primary coverage areas for those signals are fairly exclusive to one another. 1120 could lose a little of whatever they have in the inner west suburbs, but that's about it.
1200 could, perhaps, draw a few online listeners from the Armstrong (1120/1390) streams, but probably no significant difference because Bloomberg radio is already available elsewhere online for anyone who has wanted to listen to it all along.