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Does cbs buy am990 in order to have a outlet for news?
Does cbs buy am990 in order to have a outlet for news?
If CBS is going to invest anything in Miami (and given that they're making moves to get out of radio, I doubt that they will), it will be on FM. Besides, they already have a poorly-performing AM to work with: WQAM. If they're going to do anything on AM, that's where it will be.
Sorry for my fuzzy memory on this but wasn't WINZ all news at one point, following the Group W 1010 WINS format (possibly to appeal to retirees and snow birds from Noo Yawk)? Seems like Miami did try all news at one point.
The question was whether CBS might pick up another AM to do all news.
WQAM is suffering from a degraded signal, and the increasing ethnicity of the market. The primary centers for non-Hispanic white listening are increasingly on the fringe of the WQAM signal.
Of course, WQAM is also suffering from the loss of Neil Rogers from which they never recovered. That, and the hit many talkers took with the introduction of the PPM took the station out of the running. The pre-PPM billing was around $18 million and now it is about 1/4 of that.
The question was whether CBS might pick up another AM to do all news.
Oh wow. The things we remember. WINZ was all news...way the heck back when.
For the life of me I can't figure out what CBS wants with WQAM in the first place. Didn't Beasley get the better part of that deal?
AM in general suffers from a degraded signal. The format is irrelevant.
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What has impeded AM is the rise of man made noise. That simply means that a stronger signal is needed to overcome the noise than in decades past.
Add to that poorer quality radios, and what it means is that only the best AM facilities are fully competitive. But that is nothing new, as most markets grew out of the coverage of the regional channel stations they have shortly after W.W. II as urban sprawl move populations outside many stations' coverage areas.
The fact is that for the last 40 years or so, there have been an average of less than two AMs per top 100 market that cover 80% of the population or more day and night. Those stations with lesser signals survived up to the early 70's but as FM grew, people switched to the band that had more good signals and more different formats.
And all of that means what to the average listener? "Degraded signals." They don't know the technical details or why AM sounds like crap, they just know that it's gotten worse in their experience over the years, and thus, they think that AM in general has been degraded. Which, in a general sense, it has.
AM signals are the one thing that has not been degraded.
Unless stations have been poorly maintained, their signal strengths are no different than they were decades ago for the same facility.
What has impeded AM is the rise of man made noise. That simply means that a stronger signal is needed to overcome the noise than in decades past.
Add to that poorer quality radios, and what it means is that only the best AM facilities are fully competitive. But that is nothing new, as most markets grew out of the coverage of the regional channel stations they have shortly after W.W. II as urban sprawl move populations outside many stations' coverage areas.
The fact is that for the last 40 years or so, there have been an average of less than two AMs per top 100 market that cover 80% of the population or more day and night. Those stations with lesser signals survived up to the early 70's but as FM grew, people switched to the band that had more good signals and more different formats.
But saying AM has been degraded is not correct. AM is what it is; FM just does the OTA radio thing better.
Because, at face value, it wasn't untrue. AM has been degraded by electronic noise and overpopulation of the band. Most everyone understood what I meant regardless of the technical details. Interesting that you, being the all-knowing sage of radio, did not. One has to wonder if that was by choice.Then why didn't you say, "listeners perceive that AM sounds worse now..." instead of saying something that, on face value, was untrue?
For all points everywhere, Tiger Radio's signal is seven (7) dB stronger in the day than at night.Yeah, this signal is non existent in Broward during the day. At night, it gets better, but not by much.
Six, in a two next to two next to two arrangement similar to the APE's, uh, I mean WOKV's....that caused WMYM's signal to be redirected...something crazy, like 8 towers.
Because, at face value, it wasn't untrue. AM has been degraded by electronic noise and overpopulation of the band. Most everyone understood what I meant regardless of the technical details. Interesting that you, being the all-knowing sage of radio, did not. One has to wonder if that was by choice.
How do you know that even one person understood your intent?
The conditions that have made AM less viable began in the post-War 40's when urban sprawl began and gradually grew with the usage of things like fluorescent lamps. If people even think about such things, analysis shows that the changes have taken place over a 60 year period and are not recent.
In fact, in your "clarification" you fail to mention the biggest factor that limits FM: most significant AMs were licensed in the 30's and the powers needed to cover a market then are totally inadequate for covering the much larger geography of today's geographically larger markets. The flood of AMs licensed after W.W. II all had to protect those original AMs and could even less be expected to cover growing metros.
...similar to the APE's, uh, I mean WOKV's.