Jimmy128 said:The fact that there are a bunch of Black pirate stations show that there is an audience.
blackgold said:Unfortunately, WILD-AM's owners thought it would be more profitable to broadcast Communist propaganda from China Radio International, so it could broadcast its message of world domination over the great citizens of Boston. Don't you think it's a disgrace how Radio One sold out to the Commies?
blackgold said:Unfortunately, WILD-AM's owners thought it would be more profitable to broadcast Communist propaganda from China Radio International, so it could broadcast its message of world domination over the great citizens of Boston. Don't you think it's a disgrace how Radio One sold out to the Commies?
raccoonradio said:Don't we sell our debt to the Chi-comms?...anyway, WILD's owner makes money off it,
so it's capitalism...
btw dealing with pirates--driving on Lynn Shore Dr, Nahant Causeway etc I noticed an absence of
some FM pirates (at least none on 88.5, 87.9, or 89.3) but the 720 from Dorchester was on.
raccoonradio said:Chinese communists
Acronym Definition
ChiComm Chinese Communists
http://acronyms.thefreedictionary.com/ChiComm
Urban Dictionary:
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Chicom
>>Short for Chinese Communist...Chicom originated out of the Vietnam War and was first used as slang for tiny burlap bags or packets which usually contained Chinese, NVA, or Vietcong made communist propaganda as well as intel, ammo, food, medical supplies, etc.
dumber than a box of hair said:And, a bit of history: The Boston market has always been a hard sell for R&B music, going back to the days of the power-house top-40 stations like WRKO and WMEX. Lots of R&B music that topped the charts in other markets barely made a dent here.Jimmy128 said:The fact that there are a bunch of Black pirate stations show that there is an audience.
Retro said:I've noticed that Boston radio does indeed play a lot of R&B based music. Just listen to WODS or WMJX. You'll see.
mistermicrophone said:And why is WAAF on 97.7? Why is STAR now MIKE? Why did WBOS switch from disco? If those formats were successful for these stations, they'd still be what they were (except disco, of course), right?
4CX1000A said:A better question is: why did Entercom pay $30 million for 97.7? If they had waited three years, they could have had WCRB and a Class B signal (albeit centered around Andover) for half that amount.
Joseph_Gallant said:With today's (May 16th) sale of WFNX-101.7 to Clear Channel, I think there's a good chance Boston will be getting a commercial Spanish-language FM station (likely with a music format aimed at Hispanics under the age of 40) by the end of the Summer.
However, WFNX is a Class "A" station, not the more powerful Class "B". Still, 101.7 supposedly has a good signal almost everywhere inside I-495.
And despite it's signal, I think a Spanish-language 101.7 could rank among Boston's ten most popular radio stations both in 12-plus and young adult demographics within six to twelve months of it's launch.
If 101.7 goes Spanish, it's almost-instant success will be the story of 2012 in Boston radio.