jetfli said:Unfortunately, the niche was squandered in that 97.1 never created a unique identity for the station, other than to just be "continuation of 96.3."
jetfli said:I dare say they would still be on the air today with the format, even without Coyote, had they given the station its own identity.
radiodood said:I think, especially early on, that lots of WMAK listeners kept listening to 96.3 and didn't realize that their music and station was relocated.
radiodood said:You said 97.1 did a huge campaign to invite the 96.3 audience over.That is totally not true.
radiodood said:You are also wrong when you say the WMAK audience was loyal to the radio station..again, totally untrue. The audience was loyal to THE FORMAT and had they known about the frequency change, they MAY have followed.
radiodood said:AND, last but not least, another untruth, if 96.3 brings back tghe old staff, the jingles and the music, it will work in Nashville..what?? the traditional Oldies format is dead in the water. Jet Fli was right on all counts
TheBigA said:jetfli said:They're better with a 1 share playing rock than a 2 share with oldies.
This entire post, summed up in BigA's one sentence.
Hence, it's just easier to settle for nothing than work for anything.
As for the oldies coming back, no chance. After three months everyone on here would be bored with it anyway. Media buyers aren't buying the heck out of WCBS in NYC (numbers don't speak louder than $$$) and I gotta ask this querstion --- I know it shows up in numbers (ratings) --- but c'mon, how many people
that listen to radio stations NEVER hit the scan button EVER? It's unrealistic to think that once a radio is set to 96.3, no matter what, people listen to only that frequency. The oldies fans went one dial position to the right and missed Oldies 97.1? Not possible. Crumy actually did a decent progression of marketing. It's worth a simple study of why a "fairly popular station" at 96.3 imploded at 97.1. I always have contended that "it was not cool" to listen to 97.1 because it became a throw away format flip. I do agree that JACK-FM was compelling enough to get many Oldies listeners to try it and stick with it. Ratings have proven that. I think BigA may have said something on this line --- they should have waited until a little of the Jack hype had settled down to flip, because Crumy's flip to oldies, was a tiny blip compared to the major blowing up of a well-rated station. It's all in the details and timing, I guess, is everything.
firepoint525 said:At one point, most of the audience would have followed Coyote and Cathy anywhere! Remember that website that they set up, coyoteandcathy.com? There was much discussion on that site about who would hire them next, and would the audience follow them there. This seemed to be regardless of the format. Of course, we all know what happened. The site gave listeners false hope that C&C would eventually return somewhere, which never happened. Eventually the site got spammed with trolls and was finally taken down all together. There was obviously never any real news about where C&C was going, so there was no point in leaving the site up.
I never really thought Coyote was all that great, but at least he played music, which is more than we can say for most morning shows!
Ed Salamon said:Oldies formats are actually having a resurgence in the PPM measured world; WCBS-FM is #1 in the current NY ratings.
beatlenut said:Is WCBS making enough in sales to justify the format? That seems to be the main concern about creating another Oldies station in Nashville.
beatlenut said:Is WCBS making enough in sales to justify the format? That seems to be the main concern about creating another Oldies station in Nashville.
Tibbs2 said:I don't believe that anyone that suggested (in mgmt) that they flip to oldies ever considered "a tie in" with WSM-AM. Where'd that logic come from? (To obvious) ???
Tibbs2 said:Would ya rather rank #16 in rev in NYC or have a 2 share in #44?
I fully agree. It's pure bunk to suggest that they couldn't find it. It was well advertised and well publicized. It's just that "come-in-last" blew it, just like they have done with all their other frequencies.roadrunner said:I can't believe people couldn't find their oldies right next door ...one station over! Don't most people turn the dial or "button push" the seek/scan button? If they couldn't figure out that 97.1 was playing the exact same music as 96.3 the next day, then too bad. Don't think they had to go overboard advertising about it!
I agree with that, too. I get my "oldies fix" on 101.7. They don't always come in very well here (Bellevue/Pegram) but other times, they come in like they are right next door!Anyway, I would be more than happy if they'd just move WKOM into Franklin and let it be heard in Nashville Metro ...better. Move or downgrade whatever is preventing that from happening! Problem solved. Well, for some.