Dan Dennis said:
txchipk said:
1700 will no doubt be sold to meet FCC market caps.
I would break the 820/96.7 simulcast. Since 1310 only provides decent Dallas coverage, I would make it be the 96.7 simulcast --- so make WBAP on 96.7/1310 and give KTCK a full signal on 820.
820 is one of, IIRC, 5 clear-channel (not to be confused with Clear Channel) frequencies in the nation. Full-time blowtorches. And WBAP has a radio history and legacy stretching back almost to the very birth of radio. If anyone in the new combined Cumulus/Citadel company understands history at all, WBAP will not change.
Let alone travel agencies! ;D
And one of them already has one in house. :
-BGH
It's 2011, not 1981...the history is the WBAP brand not the frequency. Heritage AMs on clear channel signals have been migrating to FM all over the country in order to preserve the stations by exposing them to a broader audience. The reality is many people under 40 never go to the AM dial.
The owners of WTOP Washington DC dumped its 60 year heritage on 50 kw 1500 in favor of a move to FM. KIRO, WWL, KSL, KCBS, KOMO are other 50 kw clear channels who have moved completely to FM or now have FM simulcasts.
Aside form KPMZ being a failure, WBAP on FM was a move to get its audience younger than nursing home residents. My assumption, if that is working, WBAP will stay on FM. KTCK is the rare exception of not having problems 25-54 even though it is relegated to AM -- certainly a better AM facility could only bolster that since Tarrant Co coverage is not great anytime and nighttime coverage is terrible.
I agree, though, that the 820/96.7 simulcast needs to be broken. If you're going to simulcast WBAP, do it on something like 93.3.
And if Citadel/Cumulus keeps KLIF, buy or swap the 570 frequency for the 1190 frequency, and put those calls back where they belong. Make it the "Mighty 1190" again, and program something that gives people a reason to listen to AM radio.
Cumulus is not going to get rid of the better 570 facility for a far inferior 1190 one. It's engineering is interesting to radio geeks like us, but it is no longer the 1960s. The growth of the market into a spread-out large geographic area has rendered that a lesser facility. Turning it into a station playing music that is 50-60 years old just makes it a competitor to KAAM, which has a better signal and it's not likely there is enough advertiser demand for two stations aimed at 65+ audiences.