BRENT said:Radio in this town just plain sucks. Why can't some station's get the balls to do something totally different?
bobbybeth said:BRENT said:Radio in this town just plain sucks. Why can't some station's get the balls to do something totally different?
What would you suggest?
secondchoice said:Atlanta has to have the fewest market covering signals (AM or FM) of almost any major market outside of the Washington DC to Boston mega city. I am sure some of the problems can be attributed to the urban sprawl of a market that has almost doubled in population in the last 40 years. The limited number of full coverage facilities means there is very little completion. The only two radio “wars” to the death for “core” audience is Country 94.9 taking on 101.5 and the two sports stations 790 & 680 (with the FM translator). Radio One and Cox both have made runs at V103 but both have found it more profitable to program around them since neither has an extra 100KW in town signal to effectively compete against the V. Cox even is using 95.5 to "cover" 750. 95.5 does not have a huge signal south of I 20 but it could be a viable outlet if programed correctly.
It also doesn't help that frequency allocations were handed out when the ATL metro was MUCH smaller. Why did ATL only get 4 VHF stations allocated instead of the theoretical max of 7 like NYC and other large cities? Why does ATL only have one class A clear, vs. NYC, Chicago, etc.?secondchoice said:Atlanta has to have the fewest market covering signals (AM or FM) of almost any major market outside of the Washington DC to Boston mega city. I am sure some of the problems can be attributed to the urban sprawl of a market that has almost doubled in population in the last 40 years.
Dave FM was different when it first flipped from Z93 and the AAA format was still coming together, but now AAA isn't anything special. Ditto with 99X and the alt rock format right after the Power 99 flip.atlantaboy said:I feel like Dave-FM is definitely "different", and it's got really solid ratings
jabba17 said:Why did ATL only get 4 VHF stations allocated instead of the theoretical max of 7 like NYC and other large cities?
It doesn't, since we really only have 2 VHF stations today (WGTV on channel 8 and WXIA on channel 10), and nobody wants to do DTV on channels 2-6. WSB-TV and WAGA are on UHF 39 and 27, respectively. I was making a point about how ATL has outgrown its mid-20th-century small-town allocations on all broadcast services, just using the old analog TV allocations as another example even though they don't matter today.upstate29651 said:jabba17 said:Why did ATL only get 4 VHF stations allocated instead of the theoretical max of 7 like NYC and other large cities?
This matters not in the world of DTV.
G
charlestondxman said:Atlanta's AM radio was allocated in the 1930s, when the area had less than a million people. That's why the area only has one clear.
secondchoice said:charlestondxman said:Atlanta's AM radio was allocated in the 1930s, when the area had less than a million people. That's why the area only has one clear.
How did Nashville get 2 A's 650 & 1510? Was is more money, (both where owned buy Insurance Co.s) or politics?
secondchoice said:Atlanta has to have the fewest market covering signals (AM or FM) of almost any major market outside of the Washington DC to Boston mega city. I am sure some of the problems can be attributed to the urban sprawl of a market that has almost doubled in population in the last 40 years. The limited number of full coverage facilities means there is very little completion. The only two radio “wars” to the death for “core” audience is Country 94.9 taking on 101.5 and the two sports stations 790 & 680 (with the FM translator). Radio One and Cox both have made runs at V103 but both have found it more profitable to program around them since neither has an extra 100KW in town signal to effectively compete against the V. Cox even is using 95.5 to "cover" 750. 95.5 does not have a huge signal south of I 20 but it could be a viable outlet if programed correctly.
jabba17 said:Dave FM was different when it first flipped from Z93 and the AAA format was still coming together, but now AAA isn't anything special. Ditto with 99X and the alt rock format right after the Power 99 flip.atlantaboy said:I feel like Dave-FM is definitely "different", and it's got really solid ratings
atlantaboy said:jabba17 said:Dave FM was different when it first flipped from Z93 and the AAA format was still coming together, but now AAA isn't anything special. Ditto with 99X and the alt rock format right after the Power 99 flip.atlantaboy said:I feel like Dave-FM is definitely "different", and it's got really solid ratings
If Dave-FM and 99X are "boring", I'm not sure what you guys want in terms of "exciting" radio...a new experimental format like the Click Modern AC stations? Or some type of a dance format?
kilamanjero said:On FM allocation, a great chunk of the market's FM stations are "move-ins" in the market like Q100 (100.5), which used to be Anniston, AL but moved to the Atlanta market in 2001.