D
DominiqueRadio
Guest
I wrote this on my MYSA blog and am reposting it here for further discussion. Link to my radio blog in below in my signature.
Competition, no matter how serious you take them is still competition at the end of the day. Not to say either WOAI or KTSA did not take FM Talk 106.7 seriously. But it brings up the question on who benefits more from the departure of FM Talk.from the radio dial?
Despite the difference from being on FM to AM, when 106.7 was FM Talk it was somehow different in most peoples opinion to the traditional AM talk rivals in San Antonio 1200AM WOAI and 550AM KTSA.
All three stations have/had mostly right winged conservatives dominate their signal but it is easy to say a lot of people found talk on FM easier to stumble across. Another thing is that FM Talk had a majority of out of town syndicated talk host while you can still find local announcers on both KTSA and WOAI.
Not only from a listeners point of view but also from a sales point of view, who has more to gain by FM Talk's disappearance?
Discuss below....
Competition, no matter how serious you take them is still competition at the end of the day. Not to say either WOAI or KTSA did not take FM Talk 106.7 seriously. But it brings up the question on who benefits more from the departure of FM Talk.from the radio dial?
Despite the difference from being on FM to AM, when 106.7 was FM Talk it was somehow different in most peoples opinion to the traditional AM talk rivals in San Antonio 1200AM WOAI and 550AM KTSA.
All three stations have/had mostly right winged conservatives dominate their signal but it is easy to say a lot of people found talk on FM easier to stumble across. Another thing is that FM Talk had a majority of out of town syndicated talk host while you can still find local announcers on both KTSA and WOAI.
Not only from a listeners point of view but also from a sales point of view, who has more to gain by FM Talk's disappearance?
Discuss below....