Guards + Cavs playoffs.Cleveland Radio Apr 23 Ratings
WKSU still surging.
Nice gain for WTAM and WMMS - I assume due to Guardians.
Big drop for WENZ.
It's still a decent share in 25-54 and allows it to have decent, if not top 5, billing.Kiss is catching up with Q (maybe broadening the playlist a smidge helped)
WQAL's 4.0 is nothing to write home about
It's still doing better than JenY, which was in hash marks.I wonder how much longer until Rubber City pulls the plug on alternative on WNWV?
Regarding WMMS, I wish that they would have changed the call letters and dropped the Buzzard. The original station was very music-oriented with the Coffee Break Concerts and lots of live pickups from Music Hall, Public Hall, etc. They broke new acts and did lots of interviews with the performers. The jocks knew the music and gave you information about it. That's all pretty much gone. The two most important time periods are all talk, they broadcast hours of baseball and when they do play music, it is nothing special.107.3 has gotten better with 90s alternative, and the station sounds good.
Alan Cox is not going anywhere. He's very popular and does really well.
And now WKSU has cracked the top five in the Cleveland May book 12+ demo for the first time ever. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong @Huff but I can't remember WKSU ever having such a strong showing in either the Cleveland or Akron books???Cleveland Radio Apr 23 Ratings
WKSU still surging.
Nice gain for WTAM and WMMS - I assume due to Guardians.
Big drop for WENZ.
WKSU is scoring the largest shares in the history of the 89.7 facility in both Cleveland and Akron (both of the latest books were record highs in the respective markets.) Additionally, the 6.5 in Cleveland is much greater than the 5.3 that was the record high for WCPN/90.3.And now WKSU has cracked the top five in the Cleveland May book 12+ demo for the first time ever. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong @Huff but I can't remember WKSU ever having such a strong showing in either the Cleveland or Akron books???
WKSU's cume is notably much lower than the other stations in the top 10. (It's kinda implying that WKSU's listeners are listening to the station for much longer durations?)
There was substantial signal and program overlap between WKSU and WCPN that had the stations compete against each other for years and probably hurt them both at the same time other public radio stations were on the rise across the country. Plus WKSU didn't have a sister FM to move their classical programming to, and WCPN still had jazz in late nights, so neither were full-time spoken word public radio.It seems NPR stations are seeing their numbers gradually rise as the AM band declines. Many people seeking news and talk, unless they also want very conservative talk hosts, are getting it from an FM source. It wasn't that long ago that WTAM was ahead of WKSU and/or WCPN by a significant margin.
Legendary call letters occasionally, or often, stay-put. WGAR landed on 99.5 FM after those call letters had spent many decades on 1220 AM. Through a number of format changes, WHK (Cleveland's first radio station, I think) is still around, and Salem worked to make sure that they could keep the unique 3 letter call letters. WERE is still with us, even through a frequency change and a much different kind of talk station than in their "People Power" days. Unless WMMS changes to a drastically different format, such as Country or Religious (i.e: EMF), I think they will, and should, keep the call letters. The WMMS call letters work well with the programming as currently constructed, and can be tied to, and be a part of, the rich legacy that is WMMS in Cleveland.Regarding WMMS, I wish that they would have changed the call letters and dropped the Buzzard. The original station was very music-oriented with the Coffee Break Concerts and lots of live pickups from Music Hall, Public Hall, etc. They broke new acts and did lots of interviews with the performers. The jocks knew the music and gave you information about it. That's all pretty much gone. The two most important time periods are all talk, they broadcast hours of baseball and when they do play music, it is nothing special.
WGAR had a hard time covering the East side of Cleveland at night. While it look decent on paper, its protection of Mexico and Canada really restricted.Us old-timers still associate WGAR's name primarily with their 50,000 blowtorch AM which covered much of the east coast in 1220's heyday.