And it also lost at night due to its directional signal which was weak in the San Fernando Valley.Thanks for the reference look-up. I believe KHJ lost more to FM than to KFI.
And it also lost at night due to its directional signal which was weak in the San Fernando Valley.Thanks for the reference look-up. I believe KHJ lost more to FM than to KFI.
I maintain that if KFI and KABC swapped formats (personalities-delivery, etc.), IOW, facilities, KABC would show a big jump in listeners notwithstanding its signal infirmities.
Well, by the time KFI went Top 40, KHJ was already weakened. A lot of their 18-34 and older teen males had been switching to KLOS and KMET since 1971.Thanks for the reference look-up on the late seventies and 1980. I believe KHJ lost more to FM than to KFI.
I maintain that if KFI and KABC swapped formats (personalities-delivery, etc.), KABC would show a big jump in listeners notwithstanding its signal infirmities.
Oh, I never meant that. Just that signal alone isn't always the be all to end all. If Howard Stern was safe to put on again, AND NO ONE ELSE was doing that show, people would tolerate KABC which has far from the best and not the worst signal.Well, by the time KFI went Top 40, KHJ was already weakened. A lot of their 18-34 and older teen males had been switching to KLOS and KMET since 1971.
That left younger teen males, teen girls and 18-34 women. And yeah, when KRTH went from Oldies to a gold-heavy AC (so hit-oriented that Radio & Records listed them as a Top 40), I think that was absolutely a factor.
But I don't think you can make the argument that KFI didn't hurt KHJ.
Oh, I never meant to say that. Just that signal alone isn't always the be all to end all.
If Howard Stern was safe to put on again, AND NO ONE ELSE was doing that show, people would tolerate KABC which has far from the best and not the worst signal.
The towers are also shared with non-directional 10 kW day 500 W night 1650 KFOX "Radio Seoul"I once visited classical kfac am transmitter site whose building and twin self standing towers are in the parking lot of a gated apartment complex. Those twin towers today are shared with kabc 790 and spanish kwkw. The apartment complex and towers are off the former santa barbara avenue now martin luther king jr ave. Kabcs twin towers are in a heavy black neighborhood. A solution for kabc is to flip to a black oriented format with mostly black hosts snd content. Thats the available audience for kabc..black angelenos.
I think during that period Johnny Magnus was on KIQQ!You also have to remember that KHJ was essentially being nibbled to death from all sides---after more than a decade of really only having KRLA and KGFJ to worry about.
KGBS went 24-7 Top 40 as KTNQ the day after Christmas, 1976. KFI went Top 40 in January of 1977. KMPC was in a phase where it was playing most of the same music as Top 40, as was KIIS AM & FM. KEZY was having another one of its moments (Rick Carroll was programming and had brought Jay Stevens, Steve Lundy and Russ O'Hara with him). KDAY was doing well and L.A.'s always had a lot of crossover between Top 40 and R&B.
KNX-FM was at its peak, drawing serious 18-34 numbers. We've already mentioned KMET, KLOS and KRTH. KIQQ was playing the same music as KHJ.
I am not sure there is bigger discrepancy between ratings (shares) and reality than those years Howard was on KLSX. He ran from like 3:00 am in the morning to about 10:00 am and people would write down that they were listening to him the entire time. Sure they were. There is no way he would be as successful as he was in a PPM world.You're saying that a guy whose entire L.A. terrestrial radio audience were FM listeners would tolerate KABC's signal to hear him?
That wouldn't have even been true in the 90s.
There's a long list of big stars in L.A. radio who did the same show on different signals to very different results. By this logic Dick Whittington should have had the #1 morning show in L.A. in the 1970s. People in Orange County would have been putting up with static to hear him on KGIL.
Charlie Tuna should have been huge on KROQ-AM.
Again: People don't use radio that way. They didn't 50 years ago. Now?
In fact I am pretty sure he is not pulling his weight anymore at SiriusXM. I think that because over the last few years Sirius has gone out of their way to cross-promote Howard on their other channels like they have never done before, to the point of annoyance. That tells me subscribers are not paying for the "premiere content" of his channels. Quite frankly, Howard doesn't have nearly the pull he once had.
Plus he only does three live shows a week now.That said, Howard is 70 years old and has been on SiriusXM for eighteen years. Being on the downward slope of the career bell curve is not surprising at that stage.
That was a great period of LA radio. So much general market targeted music content. Michael references 14 stations that were in the mix for someone scanning the LA/OC radio dial looking to hear current hits (KEZY specifically was terrific in that era). Today there's just KIIS-FM and arguably KBIG. No one else is really playing much of what is currently popular. Sadly, most music formats on air now are niched or oldies (within their targeted genre).You also have to remember that KHJ was essentially being nibbled to death from all sides---after more than a decade of really only having KRLA and KGFJ to worry about.
KGBS went 24-7 Top 40 as KTNQ the day after Christmas, 1976. KFI went Top 40 in January of 1977. KMPC was in a phase where it was playing most of the same music as Top 40, as was KIIS AM & FM. KEZY was having another one of its moments (Rick Carroll was programming and had brought Jay Stevens, Steve Lundy and Russ O'Hara with him). KDAY was doing well and L.A.'s always had a lot of crossover between Top 40 and R&B.
KNX-FM was at its peak, drawing serious 18-34 numbers. We've already mentioned KMET, KLOS and KRTH. KIQQ was playing the same music as KHJ.
Sadly, most music formats on air now are niched or oldies (within their targeted genre).
That was a great period of LA radio. So much general market targeted music content. Michael references 14 stations that were in the mix for someone scanning the LA/OC radio dial looking to hear current hits (KEZY specifically was terrific in that era). Today there's just KIIS-FM and arguably KBIG. No one else is really playing much of what is currently popular. Sadly, most music formats on air now are niched or oldies (within their targeted genre).
That is the thing. I never wanted to be the old guy telling younger people how much better things were (like music, especially music) in the old days. I WANT to like the new music.That says more about the music than it does about the radio.
That is the thing. I never wanted to be the old guy telling younger people how much better things were (like music, especially music) in the old days. I WANT to like the new music.
But so much of it is mindless beats, inane topics, auto-tuned vocals, and almost none of it either truly thoughtful or (the opposite) really FUN. It feels like a chore to listen.
A perhaps naive question, but I'll still ask it. KABC used to have a relatively decent signal, I could hear it when I was in NorCal and kept touch with the Dodgers (which was once on KABC). I'm assuming the tower site on La Cienega was sold because of the value of the real estate, requiring them to diplex. Nonetheless, why would a station allow their signal to be downgraded simply because they moved to a different tower site? If I remember correctly, 790 was a 5,000 watt station before, currently they're 6600 watts day / 7900 watts night, more power but less reach. Am I missing something? Please advise, thank you.
In fact, we now have two urban hit based stations and three Regional Mexican based current based stations. And the country station is pretty much current hit based, too. So we have as many or more current based stations now.That says more about the music than it does about the radio.