poledo said:
I don't know why, but I was hoping Cumulus had done some horse trading and was going to have use of the WABB-FM call letters by the time they moved back to 97.5.
According to their post on Facebook, Cumulus can't put the WABB-FM calls on 97.5 again until 1480 is sold. That leads me to believe the Dittmans don't want Cumulus using those calls.
Also, with all this business EMF is doing with Cumulus, why didn't EMF contract with Cumulus to run the local stations in Mobile and Nashville... co-locate the station/equipment with the Cumulus' stations.... get the same engineer to keep an eye on it and have an intern make sure the satellite link is still alive a couple times a day. No more "remote" facilities waivers.
Because they'd have to pay for it! Cumulus wouldn't likely let EMF co-locate with them for free. Right now, however, WRQQ's main studio is still in the Cumulus building. The main studio waiver can't happen until EMF gets possession of the license. It's really not an issue because Cumulus is still responsible for "managing" the station, and the existing management qualifies nicely!
And anyone that thinks there's any reason to leave Magic 106.1 alone now that it's big brother WDLT has moved into the Pensacola neighborhood is crazy! Too much duplication of national content and they play the same music.
You're thinking like a programmer, not a broadcaster. In a sense, I appreciate that. I can't think of a single self-respecting programmer who would want to be in this situation. The problem is this is a business. Sales drives programming decisions. Cumulus would have to shift Magic 106.1 advertisers to 'DLT and make up the difference in the lost money from advertisers who didn't want to pay the higher Mobile rates with whatever format they'd end up running on 106.1. That's a daunting task, especially considering Magic is a top-3 performer in Pensacola!
I will say, however, that I agree with musiconradio that Cumulus will have little choice but to pull the plug on one of them, almost certainly Magic, if 'DLT cuts too much into Magic's revenue. I don't think that's too likely to happen, though.
Something else that could force a change is FCC rule 73.3556, which prohibits same band simulcasts among commonly owned stations if their primary signal contours (70 dBu) overlap 50% or more. That definitely looks like it applies here. Cumulus has, I believe, 10 days to file a waiver or split off the duplicate programming. I believe getting a waiver would be pretty easy in this case since the two stations clearly cover separate Arbitron markets, but I don't see that they've applied for one yet. I believe they could also get around the problem by having one station drop in its own music around the talk bits on Keith Sweat, Tom Joyner and/or Baisden. I don't listen enough to any of them to know if they're locally enabled, or if stations normally just drop in local avails.
The only reason Magic 106.1 existed until today was becasue WDLT had a piss poor signal in Pensacola and people here wanted to listen to WDLT bad enough to rig up two or three coat hangers on their radios.
Again, you're thinking like a programmer, not a broadcaster! Magic 106.1 exists because advertisers trying to reach Pensacola listeners feel it's a good value for their money. You're assuming people in Pensacola would want to listen to WDLT if they could just pick it up. Looking over more than 20 years of ratings history for the two markets simply doesn't support that conclusion.