Every time I see the market rankings from Nielsen, I'm always baffled at some of the hyphenated markets. I think sometimes markets are held together by Nielsen because the stations there demand it.
For example: in Texas, I don't understand why Bryan-College Station isn't it's own market. The cities are about 100 miles from Waco, yet the stations are in the same market. I'm well aware that all of the Waco-Temple-Killeen stations have sister stations in the BCS area, but I don't see why cities that are so far apart from each other are considered to be in the same DMA. It makes no sense.
The BCS market would be small (like 150 in rank) and Waco-Temple-Killeen would drop out of the top 100, but so what? It wouldn't change anything about how many people live in those two areas. It seems to me the combined sales from the two areas for all the stations would be the same.
The same could be said of the Sherman-Ada market in Southern Oklahoma/ North Texas. It's almost 3 markets. Ada-Ardmore is where the stations used to be based. They both also served the Sherman-Denison area of North Texas and had repeater stations in Paris, Texas. For a while, one of the stations even used to produce a seperate newscast for Paris. Now both stations are based in the Sherman-Denison area with bureaus in Ardmore and Ada. Paris is still served by repeaters of both. The sparse population in much of this market is probably the reason why it is cobbled together the way it is. However, anyone who's worked there knows that there's little commonality between the Sherman-Denison area and Ada-Ardmore. The folks on the Texas side of the border are probably more interested in the DFW area than anything to the north of the border. The population growth on the Texas side of the border will make that divide even worse over the next few years. I just wonder if perhaps it would be better to see the Ada area added to the OKC market and Ardmore/ Sherman-Denison moved into a market with Paris and a few other Texas border counties. This probably won't happen because it would hurt the ranking of the DFW market. But it still would make some sense.
For example: in Texas, I don't understand why Bryan-College Station isn't it's own market. The cities are about 100 miles from Waco, yet the stations are in the same market. I'm well aware that all of the Waco-Temple-Killeen stations have sister stations in the BCS area, but I don't see why cities that are so far apart from each other are considered to be in the same DMA. It makes no sense.
The BCS market would be small (like 150 in rank) and Waco-Temple-Killeen would drop out of the top 100, but so what? It wouldn't change anything about how many people live in those two areas. It seems to me the combined sales from the two areas for all the stations would be the same.
The same could be said of the Sherman-Ada market in Southern Oklahoma/ North Texas. It's almost 3 markets. Ada-Ardmore is where the stations used to be based. They both also served the Sherman-Denison area of North Texas and had repeater stations in Paris, Texas. For a while, one of the stations even used to produce a seperate newscast for Paris. Now both stations are based in the Sherman-Denison area with bureaus in Ardmore and Ada. Paris is still served by repeaters of both. The sparse population in much of this market is probably the reason why it is cobbled together the way it is. However, anyone who's worked there knows that there's little commonality between the Sherman-Denison area and Ada-Ardmore. The folks on the Texas side of the border are probably more interested in the DFW area than anything to the north of the border. The population growth on the Texas side of the border will make that divide even worse over the next few years. I just wonder if perhaps it would be better to see the Ada area added to the OKC market and Ardmore/ Sherman-Denison moved into a market with Paris and a few other Texas border counties. This probably won't happen because it would hurt the ranking of the DFW market. But it still would make some sense.