I'm not going to keep pushing the flag on Pulse....the many facts were brought up about this station on the New York board. Honestly, it's really a question of seeing the cup "half empty" or "half full". You see the money and banks. I see the extenuating circumstances regarding that station based on the small signal and the dial location. I still stand by the fact, that given a strong frequency above 92, the station would be in the top 5. Either or we are both
not wrong in our perspectives.
Though with the bad economy all around, I'm certainly not going to see any radical flips happen anytime soon, anywhere. HOWEVER, the industry known as "radio" continues to "dogg" itself for trying to "play it safe" with formats and in a lot of cases it just doesn't work. WRXP in New York is the best example of that. That's why I constantly have thought "outside the box" with my views regarding dance music and a "
dance station" (so as no one misspells it!)

Of course the format won't work everywhere. I can't see farmers in rural Nebraska tune in to the latest track by Cascada (she is a dance artist). Likewise, I can't see urban professionals necessarily tune in to country music in New York. But that doesn't mean that there isn't a fanbase that wants such a station to appear on the radio up here and I wish them all the luck in the world!
Okay, so I may never be a businessman. I'm not trying to be. I'm always going to fight it out for dance music. If this thread had accomplished something (I have pointed people to this thread as a "study".) people can see that there is a lot of work that has to be done because there are certainly enough haters out there (not saying you Oaktree) that would love nothing more than to see defeat and feel that they could get away with "bullying" someone that has an idea and concept that comes off different.
Out of all the boards I've been to in Radio-Info....aside from the time when WCBS flipped to "Jack", I've never seen this amount of responses come off on a single thread.
Perhaps 2009 may not be the time. But in time, maybe corporate will "get it" and do something different. It doesn't necessarily have to be dance, but something that could capture people, that were "shunned away", back to the medium. What that will take is anyone's guess.