• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Countdown to 92.3 going KA-BOOM!

A couple of things here...

If WFAN makes the move, they will be "all-in" with their best programming on the FM, since that's where the battlefield is with ESPN. 660's reach means nothing. 92.3 hits the entire metro, as does 98.7, and that's what's important. Competing for ratings WITHIN THE METRO! I can't see a scenario where the Yanks are on AM and the Mets on FM. That won't fly. My guess is that one station will have the Yankees and the loser of that bidding war settles for the Mets...and BOTH will be on FM.
 
It's anyone's guess if Merlin is dancing in the aisles or being sedated right now.

See, if WFAN reacts by going to 92.3 as a simulcast, then a big New York City signal on FM becomes unavailable for CBS to put either WINS or WCBS should the need arise. At this point, everybody with a broadcast license in NYC seems to be on the diving board but doesn't know if it's at the shallow or deep end of the pool.

WEMP, somewhat committed to issues-talk in the near future, now may find themselves having to go to a Plan E, or whatever alphabet letter they're up to now.

Interesting maneuvering, all around. Radio story of the year for certain.
 
If WFAN makes the move, they will be "all-in" with their best programming on the FM, since that's where the battlefield is with ESPN. 660's reach means nothing.

You're absolutely right that for ratings and advertising sales the battle will be on FM which reaches the full market, with the exception of Eastern Long Island.

However, there are lots of Yankees fans, who live in adjacent radio markets, who follow the team closely and go to games. And those fans may not get the primary FM signal. And then there is the Yankees fan diaspora which is spread all over the country, and includes countless former New Yorkers who now live in the Eastern half of the country and spend a lot of summer nights catching the Yankees game, while sitting on the porch, or driving in the the car, on the big AM skywave signals.

The team itself, needs to keep these out of radio market fan bases in mind when it makes its next radio deal, not for the sake of advertising and ratings, but for maintaining the value of the franchise.
 
To be honest, I don't think the Yankees care if their games reach their far flung fan base via a 50K clear AM. They would like to be on FM in the metro, and they certainly don't want to be stuck on AM and watch the Mets make a deal with 98.7. That would be a nightmare. Out of market fans have a variety of ways of getting the games...MLB.com, Sirius/XM etc. I'm sure whoever gets the rights will seek out affiliates surrounding the NYC metro that the local FM doesn't reach. It's all about the Benjamins, and being where most of their audience is...on FM.
 
I think 101.9 should go back to playing Rock, 94.7 should go country. 92.3 should go Sports but have some way to keep people's jobs though, move them to other stations. I don't like how 98.7 people lost their jobs.
 
fmradio1 said:
To be honest, I don't think the Yankees care if their games reach their far flung fan base via a 50K clear AM. They would like to be on FM in the metro, and they certainly don't want to be stuck on AM and watch the Mets make a deal with 98.7. That would be a nightmare. Out of market fans have a variety of ways of getting the games...MLB.com, Sirius/XM etc. I'm sure whoever gets the rights will seek out affiliates surrounding the NYC metro that the local FM doesn't reach. It's all about the Benjamins, and being where most of their audience is...on FM.

The issues that would seem to matter to the Yankees (or Mets) in signing a radio deal would be (a) money, and (b) ability, via primary or affiliates, to reach their markets from which they sell tickets and have fans watching games on YES or SNY increasing the value of advertising and price of carriage. Closer markets with high disposable income mean more.

The Yankees have a very strong network. They may want a Suffolk County signal, and may want a Central/South Jersey signal, in order to compensate for an FM with less reach than WCBS-AM, but they wouldn't have any trouble finding stations with their popularity in those areas. (The Yanks are already chock full of Connecticut stations.) The Mets, however, who once had a decent network, rely almost solely on WFAN. Further -- and this pains me as a Mets fan for 50 years -- as NY's second team, which isn't likely to compete for a pennant anytime soon, they will have a tough time reaching parts of their market that are weak on an FM signal that include a serious percentage of fans. The Mets are going to get the station that doesn't land the Yankees, and they are more screwed if they land on an FM-only than the Yankees would be. (Of course, this is the team that won a World Series broadcasting on WJRZ (now WNYM) when the signal was so bad I had trouble getting it in my childhood part of Brooklyn at night.)
 
The Mets are no stranger to FM. In 1967, their flagship was WJRZ which had trouble reaching parts of the five boroughs. In 1968, they added WABC-FM (95.5) which could reach out to Suffolk County. When ABC-FM got further into the rock format, Mets' games moved to WNBC-FM (97.1) in 1970 before returning to WHN in 1972.

Now back to the future! IMHO, CBS has no choice but to simulcast WFAN on 92.3 FM and blow up NOW. IMHO, they can't afford to wait two years like they did in Philly, especially with both the Yankees and Mets deals expiring after this season. If NOW is going to be sacrificed, it has to be done soon.

As much as the Yankees like reaching their fan base on a 50 kW blowtorch, they want to be on FM in NYC. A WFAN simulcast can offer that. When football season arrives, the Yankee games can air on 660 AM and the Giant games on 92.3 FM. When the Yankee season ends, Giants games can be simulcast. This is done in other markets. CBS will probably let the Mets go to 98.7.

I'm in Ocean County, NJ and 92.3 and 98.7 are receivable and listenable in my car. Not so much at home. :)
 
This.

radioguy39nj said:
CBS has no choice but to simulcast WFAN on 92.3 FM and blow up NOW. IMHO, they can't afford to wait two years like they did in Philly, especially with both the Yankees and Mets deals expiring after this season.

The AM station can also broadcast Yankee games "in real time" with the FM simulcast using the 7-second delay, much like how the WIP-AM/FM combo broadcasts Phillies games.
 
XCountry285 said:
I think 101.9 should go back to playing Rock, 94.7 should go country. 92.3 should go Sports but have some way to keep people's jobs though, move them to other stations. I don't like how 98.7 people lost their jobs.

The two daily local jocks on Kiss will be at BLS. Everything else on the daily schedule was syndicated.
 
Rather than start a new thread...AllAccess reporting that WXRK 92~3 Now imaging director Chris Cole exits the station. He also handled the same duties for CBS Radio's AMP Radio Detroit.

The exodus continues...besides the new PD from Phoenix (Rick Gillette).

There is precedence for bringing in a new PD shortly before a format switch at CBS Radio: in San Diego, PD Charese Fruge was brought in to Sophie 103.7 (Hot AC/modern AC) a few months ago. Then a little over a month ago the format was changed to CHR (Energy 103.7) and Fruge (after a month with the new format) has since gone back to Las Vegas where she had been already overseeing 2 stations through the whole process.

Could it happen again?
 
Nick said:
Thing is, will a 660/92.3 simulcast make more money than WFAN + 92.3 Now combined? Or perhaps they could move WFAN to 92.3, WINS to 660, and sell 1010. The New York sports teams have fans who live further than the 40 dBu contour of the FM stations. The Yankees have fans all over, and WCBS's skywave reaches those fans (at least for the night games)

Nah..keep an AM'FM simulcast of the Fan.
 
pjc1961 said:
There is precedence for bringing in a new PD shortly before a format switch at CBS Radio: in San Diego, PD Charese Fruge was brought in to Sophie 103.7 (Hot AC/modern AC) a few months ago. Then a little over a month ago the format was changed to CHR (Energy 103.7) and Fruge (after a month with the new format) has since gone back to Las Vegas where she had been already overseeing 2 stations through the whole process.

Could it happen again?

Except that Charese had been the PD of Sophie for a few years. Then she began to oversee Mix in Las Vegas in addition to her duties at Sophie... then they added a second station in Vegas to her load a few months ago before the format flip sent her full time to Vegas. So that's not a valid comparison.
 
If CBS was simply going to use 92.3 as a simulcast of WFAN (or move it to 92.3 completely), why would they need a new PD? Wouldn't they just use the existing PD at WFAN?
 
ansky212 said:
If CBS was simply going to use 92.3 as a simulcast of WFAN (or move it to 92.3 completely), why would they need a new PD? Wouldn't they just use the existing PD at WFAN?

He's referencing the fact that there's a fairly new PD at 92.3 Now/WXRK who was brought in from Arizona.
 
Right now WFAN is earning 8 times the revenue of ESPN. An FM simulcast at this point will not generate more revenue than 92.3 Now. Obviously ESPN's revenue will increase. I think the total revenue for NYC's sports stations will increase, as many of ESPN's new listeners will not come from WFAN, but from people who don't listen to AM radio. People who like the shows on WFAN will continue to listen to 660, unless their favorite hosts move to ESPN.

But if I were working at Now, I'd start sending out resumes. That may be what the staff is doing now, and hence they're leaving on their own terms for a new job.

Chunky is supposed to move to DC at WPGC soon.
 
Right now WFAN is earning 8 times the revenue of ESPN. An FM simulcast at this point will not generate more revenue than 92.3 Now. Obviously ESPN's revenue will increase. I think the total revenue for NYC's sports stations will increase, as many of ESPN's new listeners will not come from WFAN, but from people who don't listen to AM radio. People who like the shows on WFAN will continue to listen to 660, unless their favorite hosts move to ESPN.

But if I were working at Now, I'd start sending out resumes. That may be what the staff is doing now, and hence they're leaving on their own terms for a new job.

Chunky is supposed to move to DC at WPGC soon

But here's the part of the equation nobody has mentioned yet: How much does it cost to run 92.3 now? As in, what's the net profit.

To simulcast, it costs CBS nothing except the electric bill. Any additional gain in revenue goes right to the bottom line. So if 92.3 now grosses $17 million but costs $13 to run, and CBS can make an additional $10 million by simulcasting, guess what's going to happen?

If ESPN takes away listeners from the Fan and men 25-54 starts to go down, you can bet that 92.3 will be "then", now.
 
I don't think CBS is taking ESPN's move to 98.7 lightly. I mentioned on one of these threads (perhaps this one) that Rick Gillette better not unpack his bags. He's apparently already gone.

I think the simulcast will begin before the first Giants pre-season football game. If it overlaps the Mets, baseball can go to 660, football to 92.3. The WFAN simulcast is inevitable. :)
 
Nick said:
Right now WFAN is earning 8 times the revenue of ESPN. An FM simulcast at this point will not generate more revenue than 92.3 Now. Obviously ESPN's revenue will increase. I think the total revenue for NYC's sports stations will increase, as many of ESPN's new listeners will not come from WFAN, but from people who don't listen to AM radio. People who like the shows on WFAN will continue to listen to 660, unless their favorite hosts move to ESPN.

But if I were working at Now, I'd start sending out resumes. That may be what the staff is doing now, and hence they're leaving on their own terms for a new job.

Chunky is supposed to move to DC at WPGC soon.
Is Chunky really moving to WPGC seems to me that should have been announced by now. Also Rick Gillette is a very good PD he will be ok but he should have stayed in Phoenix
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom