gregg75 said:
I think a lot of the dull radio in ATL is because we basically have only one of
everything. If we had 2 or 3 with the same format going after the same audience
it would be a lot more competitive. One station would feed off the other and that
would make for healthier and more enjoyable radio. Stations would no longer be
able to sit on their tush and do as little as they can get by with.
And this is nothing new. The single format dilemma has been in place here for years
although it is very slowly starting to fade.
Dunno about that...looking at the ratings (and using their format descriptions) we have 3 urbans (V-103 and WHTA and WWVA), 2 urban ACs (Kiss and WAMJ), three news/talkers (750 AM and
NOW 95.5 FM WSB, WGST, WGKA), 1 gospel (WPZE) and 2 Christian ACs (Fish and J93), 2 countrys (Bull and Kicks, plus the 3+ rimshots), 2 sportstalkers (Fan and Zone), 2 classic hits (River and AGH), and 2 rockers (Project and Rock100.5, although those stations couldn't be any more different).
Where there is a lack of competition is in the CHR/secular AC space, where you have one CHR/M (Q100), one AC (B98.5), one hot AC (Star), and one AAA (Dave), and no CHR/R.
If anything we have a glut of urban and a glut of classic rock (which is causing poor ratings for all players in the case of classic rock), and redundancy in Christian AC and country.
We could go back to the early 80s, where we had five or six stations fighting for the AC space (94Q as hot AC, Peach as soft AC, Fox as 60s/70s/80s AC, and B98.5, Warm 100/99.7, and Lite 106 as "regular" AC).
jabba17 said:
The original class C's on the commercial band are 92.9 (originally WGKA-FM), 94.1 (WGST-FM, WKXI), 94.9 (WAVQ), 96.1, 98.5, 99.7 (WLTA), 101.5 (WBIE-FM), and 103.3 (WPLO-FM).
For comparison, the original formats of the above stations were classical, BM, religious (later BM), BM, BM, BM, BM (later country), and country (later AOR), respectively.