That would be like ROR flipping.
They gave up on their HD2 channel. It's been off the air for months. It's last format was the "Men from Maine Channel".
That would be like ROR flipping.
They gave up on their HD2 channel. It's been off the air for months. It's last format was the "Men from Maine Channel".
I am wondering when WBOS will get some heat ?
Not for this market, morning show
How do you figure?
Which means nothing. Advertisers weren't buying the HD2 and the audience for it was too small to measure.
I know that. I just thought they'd keep running some sort of low or no-cost automated programming on it like some of the others.
I interpreted that as a poorly punctuated "not-for-this-market morning show," referring to the non-locally-originated programming during those hours.
Better a year too early than a year too late is the philosophy of Bill Belichick so maybe they are going with that if they do make a big switch.
I am wondering when WBOS will get some heat ?
Not for this market, morning show and now falling backwards again in the ratings.
We don't know who or where but twitter is buzzing about a potential "unthinkable format change" tomorrow with a company CEO landing in that market....may not be this one...but who knows. (Via @radioinsight tweet
Scott Fybush adds if this is true he'll get the details up at Northeast Radio Watch.
Was this supposed to be the big thing this week? I find the move hardly "unthinkable!"
As part of this exchange, Entercom got all-sports WTEM-AM + FM translator in Washington DC.
The "unthinkable" flip might be WJFK-FM flipping from sports talk to some music format.
Except that WJFK is billing as much as WTEM... the two sports stations are both decent billers. And both are top 10 billers in the market.
I have no revenue research on two competing sports stations owned by the same company. Can they expect to retain that billing once they're co-owned?
Isn't that why Entercom was forced to divest WBZ-FM?