I had the honor to serve as VP/GM of WFMX from 1990 thru 1996 during the ownership of Adventure Communications. This station served a whole lot more than just Statesville. That 100,000 watt signal covered parts of 3 states, NC, VA and SC. When we bought the station we set out not to cover the Charlotte or Triad markets, but to cover the "in between" areas..Statesville, Hickory, Taylorsville, Mocksville, Salisbury, Mooresville, Wilksboro, etc......an area that contained over 700,000 people. We offered country and NASCAR programming aimed to those listeners and advertisers. And it worked. We subscribed to the Arbitron county report and it consistently showed the station with nearly 300,000 cume. Our billing exceeded 3 million dollars and the profits were strong. Our annual Country Homecoming concert at the Van Hoy Family Campgrounds drew between 20,000-40,000 every September. Our NASCAR programming went way beyond the standard MRN/PRN stuff. The point is this: radio stations can not only survive outside of metro areas, they can win big. WFMX did. When consolidation came along we tried very hard to acquire 2 other fm's in the area. When those effort failed we sold the station. WFMX had an amazing history....the first fulltime FM country station and the first station to provide regular broadcasts of stock car races. It will be missed, especially by those listeners in all the small towns who thought of 105.7 as there home town country station. Often times big companies cannot see the special, unique qualities that make a station like WFMX succesful. They want it to fit their mold, not realizing what it is that makes the station successful. To Edd Robinson, Mark Rose, Tim Sherrill and all the quality radio pros I had the honor to work with...good luck. To Billy Buck, another great guy I had the honor to work with, I wish you much success with WSIC. Statesville deserves an outstanding local station and I know you'll bust your butt to give it one. And to Clear Channel and all the other companies like them who fail to have the vision necessary to operate stations like WFMX, you just don't get it.