nino said:KNFX and KMFX are dark, per CC (to the FCC), "due to financial performance issues". Not able to sell 'em?...
I hear they filed Notifications of Suspension of Operations and Requests for Silent Special Temporary Authority.
DavidEduardo said:There are 1748 AMs in the top 100 markets yet only about 250 of them are "viable" in the sense of having a signal that covers 80% of the market or more day and night with a usable signal.
SirRoxalot said:DavidEduardo said:There are 1748 AMs in the top 100 markets yet only about 250 of them are "viable" in the sense of having a signal that covers 80% of the market or more day and night with a usable signal.
Could there be so many AMs in the top 100 markets, with so few with full-market coverage because so many of those AMs were originally licensed to smaller communities, and corporate raiders like Clear Channel have turned them into large-market rimshots?
Return the AMs to servicing their original cities of license. A lot of the problem will go away. I hope that the FCC takes the licenses away from Clear Channel and allows other broadcasters to apply for them so they can serve the public interest, convenience, and necessity.
SirRoxalot said:[
Could there be so many AMs in the top 100 markets, with so few with full-market coverage because so many of those AMs were originally licensed to smaller communities, and corporate raiders like Clear Channel have turned them into large-market rimshots?
Return the AMs to servicing their original cities of license.
A lot of the problem will go away. I hope that the FCC takes the licenses away from Clear Channel and allows other broadcasters to apply for them so they can serve the public interest, convenience, and necessity.
SirRoxalot said:It's very simple. Revoke the licenses since they've gone dark, and put them up for grabs. I'll bet that there are local broadcasters or community groups that can present programming that will serve the local community better than Clear Channel's syndicated pap and still pay the electric bill.
Why should Clear Channel hold a license that it doesn't intend to use? They've proven that they're far better as consolidators than they are as operators. It's time to put an end to the Clear Channelization of radio and get back to the business of broadcasting.
DavidEduardo said:Very few AMs have been "moved in" because move-ins were prohibatative prior to the changes in the rules that spawned Docket 80-90 in the late 80's. By that time, AM was so in decline, nobody wanted to mess with them.
Most unviable AM stations are found in just a couple of categories. 1. Daytimers of any kind. 2. Stations that were viable in the 30's and 40's but whose markets outgrew them in the 50's and 60's. 3. Highly directional staitons that don't cover all the market day and night. 4. Low power stations in towns that are now suburbs which were separate communities 50 or 60 years ago.
DavidEduardo said:Clear Channel just about reinvented AM. They developed talk at WOAI and KTOK and a couple of others, and then with Randy Michaels literally gave new life to the band. In the process, they rescued failing stations from WOAI and KFI to WTAM and WLW that were essentially dead before Clear got them. You can say many things about Clear, but they deserve credit for investing in AMs, rebuilding decrepit technical facilities and investing in programming and promotion when few others wanted to.
smedge2006 said:DavidEduardo said:Very few AMs have been "moved in" because move-ins were prohibatative prior to the changes in the rules that spawned Docket 80-90 in the late 80's. By that time, AM was so in decline, nobody wanted to mess with them.
Most unviable AM stations are found in just a couple of categories. 1. Daytimers of any kind. 2. Stations that were viable in the 30's and 40's but whose markets outgrew them in the 50's and 60's. 3. Highly directional staitons that don't cover all the market day and night. 4. Low power stations in towns that are now suburbs which were separate communities 50 or 60 years ago.
One factor left out is the "first or second audio service" exemption to FCC rules in the 70's and 80's. At that time, the FCC had a freeze on AM applications, unless one could show that a given application would be the first or second audio service to a given community. This led to a rash of daytimers assigned to larger cities (say, Tampa FL) applying the change COL to a suburb (say Temple Terrace FL) with just enough juice to cover 80% of the tiny suburb. This was more a "move-out" than a "move-in", but had a similar effect on AM band clutter and turned a lot of highly-rated daytimers into lower-rated fulltimers.
DavidEduardo said:Clear Channel just about reinvented AM. They developed talk at WOAI and KTOK and a couple of others, and then with Randy Michaels literally gave new life to the band. In the process, they rescued failing stations from WOAI and KFI to WTAM and WLW that were essentially dead before Clear got them. You can say many things about Clear, but they deserve credit for investing in AMs, rebuilding decrepit technical facilities and investing in programming and promotion when few others wanted to.
This statement is so misleading as to suggest either prevarication, gross oversimplification or a phenomenal case of amnesia. Clear didn't build up KFI. Cox did -- because prior to the mid-90's they still invested in and built up AM stations. WOAI was a laggard in moving to talk -- in fact KTSA had Limbaugh first, for a decade, and the only way WOAI could get it away was when Clear bought Jacor and moved it. WTAM and WLW were rescued by Jacor -- a company with a different management and definitely a different style from the pre-98 or the current Clear Channel. Michaels had already done most of his AM-station rebuilding by the time Clear acquired Jacor and he became Darth Vader to the Mays' empire. AM station relaunches since then have not gone so well -- see WFLF, Orlando.
DavidEduardo said:Very few AMs have been "moved in" because move-ins were prohibatative prior to the changes in the rules that spawned Docket 80-90 in the late 80's. By that time, AM was so in decline, nobody wanted to mess with them.
Most unviable AM stations are found in just a couple of categories. 1. Daytimers of any kind. 2. Stations that were viable in the 30's and 40's but whose markets outgrew them in the 50's and 60's. 3. Highly directional staitons that don't cover all the market day and night. 4. Low power stations in towns that are now suburbs which were separate communities 50 or 60 years ago.
DavidEduardo said:Clear Channel just about reinvented AM. They developed talk at WOAI and KTOK and a couple of others, and then with Randy Michaels literally gave new life to the band. In the process, they rescued failing stations from WOAI and KFI to WTAM and WLW that were essentially dead before Clear got them. You can say many things about Clear, but they deserve credit for investing in AMs, rebuilding decrepit technical facilities and investing in programming and promotion when few others wanted to.
smedge2006 said:One factor left out is the "first or second audio service" exemption to FCC rules in the 70's and 80's. At that time, the FCC had a freeze on AM applications, unless one could show that a given application would be the first or second audio service to a given community. This led to a rash of daytimers assigned to larger cities (say, Tampa FL) applying the change COL to a suburb (say Temple Terrace FL) with just enough juice to cover 80% of the tiny suburb. This was more a "move-out" than a "move-in", but had a similar effect on AM band clutter and turned a lot of highly-rated daytimers into lower-rated fulltimers.
This statement is so misleading as to suggest either prevarication, gross oversimplification or a phenomenal case of amnesia. Clear didn't build up KFI. They didn't own it until 2000. Cox did -- because prior to the mid-90's they still invested in and built up AM stations. WOAI was a laggard in moving to talk -- in fact KTSA had Limbaugh first, for a decade, and the only way WOAI could get it away was when Clear bought Jacor and moved it. WTAM and WLW were rescued by Jacor -- a company with a different management and definitely a different style from the pre-98 or the current Clear Channel. Michaels had already done most of his AM-station rebuilding by the time Clear acquired Jacor and he became Darth Vader to the Mays' empire. AM station relaunches since then have not gone so well -- see WFLF, Orlando.
DavidEduardo said:I can't find evidence in American Radio of a singe high rated daytimer (top 10) in any of the top 100 markets between 1975 and 1990. I, thus, don't see this as having any significance at all.
DavidEduardo said:WFLF back to its WGTO days has never been a real contender in Orlando. It has signal issues (low band where in the summer FL is the noisiest place in the US for AM with a site way out of town) and it does not put a usable signal over the whole MSA. WDBO, simply put, has a better signal over more people than 540.