By the way... Looks like Jeffrey can update his signature on this board now... :
In "Jeffrey"'s defense, I wouldn't change it yet, since nobody can agree on a "proper" format for any radio station, no matter what format is chosen, somebody will always be agreeing with the sig.DToTheJ said:By the way... Looks like Jeffrey can update his signature on this board now... :![]()
Scott Fybush said:Once more, with feeling:
WMAS-FM is not the biggest obstacle to moving 94.7 into Manhattan. WWSK 94.3 on Long Island is. Unlike some of the other second-adjacent situations that have lent themselves to move-ins (93.1/93.5/93.9, 96.3/96.7/97.1, 103.5/103.9/104.3), the Newark and Smithtown signals were fully spaced in 1964, and thus are not grandfathered and must continue to obey current spacing rules. And there's not much (if any) wiggle room to move 94.3 out of the picture - it's already short-spaced to WYBC-FM, among others.
There's also a huge obstacle to downgrading WMAS-FM, and that's the COL change to Enfield a few years back. Any downgrade to WMAS-FM must still put a 70 dBu signal over Enfield, and that means (a) a less-than-optimum signal over the core of the Springfield market and (b) moving the transmitter site south from downtown Springfield, which is exactly the direction you don't want to be moving if you're hoping to open up space for WFME.
Giacomo Siffredi said:I believe this has been discussed before, and the FCC would disallow this. The rules for AM and FM are different. Even if the 94.3 license was surrendered, the placeholder exists and must be protected. Scott Fybush can much better explain this...radioguy39nj said:The only other alternative would be for Cumulus to purchase 94.3 and take it dark, freeing the way for 94.7 to move to Manhattan.
carolinaradio said:WABC on FM would be stupid. Is conservative talk really viable enough to put on FM on that signal? I don't think so.
It would be interesting if, whatever the format may be, the station could have the WABC-FM calls.
Mac Daddy said:If WBAI is also sold, I would like to see 94.7 go alternative and 99.5 go country.
LA_Guy said:Since WFME and the 94.3 in Smithtown are both pre 1964 stations, I can easily see the FCC granting a waiver to move 94.7 to Empire. Just watch.
Cumulus bought 94.7 for a mere 40 million dollars. It's simply amazing to see a class B NYC station would sell this cheap.
A sale/lease makes the most sense, but they are liberals, and, well...HHH said:Mac Daddy said:If WBAI is also sold, I would like to see 94.7 go alternative and 99.5 go country.
Pacifica would NEVER sell WBAI without an exchange for another signal. Never.
Not impossible that Cumulus would (as mentioned) swap 94.7 with 99.5 for some much needed cash to Pacifica, possibly with Pacifica also getting a 99.5 HD2 channel in the deal.
But, who knows? The Pacifica crew have turned down truckloads of money for that frequency in the past.
Although, the past is the past. They are in (reportedly) worse financial shape than ever, PLUS will they still get big bucks for 99.5 in the future?
The demise of the current RXP is because the owner had to sell it in order to keep afloat. After all the money spent on establishing Merlin and the money lost by the "FM News" stations, they had to sell something. And when you're being offered $75 million, it's hard to say no. RXP did not fail, check it's ratings already, it's owner did.Kevin L. Sealy said:Joseph Gallant,
I don't know if you know New York radio, but over the past 25 plus years New York can't support more than one Rock station. The pending demise of WRXP is proof of that. New York is NOT a rock town.
Thanks,
Kevin L. Sealy
Wrong. I'd put a WABC simulcast as more likely than rock. Sports is another possibility, even though a small one due to how overcrowded the market is and Cumulus can't combo it with anything sports-related like CBS and ESPN.Joseph_Gallant said:As to what will happen to 94.7:
Odds of it becoming active rock: About 55%.
Odds of it becoming country: About 45%.
Odds of it becoming anything else: Close to zero.
Kevin L. Sealy said:Joseph Gallant,
I don't know if you know New York radio, but over the past 25 plus years New York can't support more than one Rock station. The pending demise of WRXP is proof of that. New York is NOT a rock town.
Thanks,
Kevin L. Sealy
An article about the sale in InsideRadio states, "It appears putting WABC on the FM dial isn’t the plan." It mentions the same statement by Cumulus CEO Lew Dickey that I had quoted.Barry said:My guess is that Cumulus will not use 94.7 for WABC's programming.
That is because CEO Lew Dickey stated the station will provide "compelling new programming.."
Besides, WABC 770 appeals to a mature demo that is quite comfortable with AM radio.