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Buffalo Cumulus sells AM to Buddy Shula

This kinda' sounds like people in Manhattan not wanting to have posts about stations on Long Island. If the signals reach as locals or even rimshots, then it seems that the subject is relative. But if we get into discussions on the financial status of Bell and stuff like that, it is a bit far off from a Buffalo board.
It's not the subject matter, David. It just seems that the discussion of Classic Hits and Canadian radio has wandered far away from the WECK and WUSW topic. BTW, WUSW is now available online, but the website 1270 The Patriot is still "launching soon." Maybe it'll be a July 4th surprise.
 
It's not the subject matter, David. It just seems that the discussion of Classic Hits and Canadian radio has wandered far away from the WECK and WUSW topic. BTW, WUSW is now available online, but the website 1270 The Patriot is still "launching soon." Maybe it'll be a July 4th surprise.
Keep in mind that it is a “ test” stream. It’s not on air for a reason. There are a ton of tweaks in the audio, levels, etc that engineering is working on in advance of on air launch. Lots of work to do.
 
WBEN has changed it's weekday schedule. David Bellavia is now 9 to 1, Joe Beamer is 1 to 3 and Bauerle is 3 to 6. That should give Buddy a good spike for Clay and Buck from 1 to 3 since Beamer is virtually un-listenable for any extended period of time.
 
They've started airing ads for The Patriot on local TV, which is the smart thing to do.
It's smart, yes, but it might be smarter to have a local radio contest to see if callers can name any of the businesses that advertised in the past hour. (or so)
If they can't...
 
I agree. When I was in Eagle Pass, Texas at a Top 40 playing 3 to 6 spots between almost every record in 1981, we ran a listen to the commercials and win. I have to admit, it was my idea after my boss suggested a mystery song. I figured it had been tried at many places and I hoped it would work. I was about 25 with a few years of small market radio at the time.

Border radio was always super cheap spots because you could buy the two biggest stations across the river for what it cost to buy one spot on our station. Eagle Pass was 97% Hispanic with Spanish the dominant language; then Spanglish and English. A substitute teacher in the public school district did not have to speak English. When the market is like this, all you can do is follow what the Piedras Negras stations charge, because your advertisers are buying them too. Eagle Pass was very reliant on the upper middle class and wealthy from Mexico shopping in Eagle Pass

We said in contest promos that at any time we could ask you to call and tell us the last 3 commercials that played. If they couldn't remember the business name but describe the product or commercial, that would be acceptable. I tried to get the sales manager to get some gift certificates from local businesses for the contest but she didn't seem to like the idea. Naturally a gift certificate providing advertiser commercial being aired would be a prompt to ask for callers as I described it to the sales manager.

By the way, the contest worked very well. The advertisers loved it and listeners seemed to as well. Most of the giveaways were lunches at restaurants. I knew a couple of ladies with desk jobs keeping a list of the commercials we played next to the phone message pad. We ran it for a month and went to a different contest per the GM.
 


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