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Do the right thing !

Re: What about serving the community?

Its a shame that
> Providence get a FM Hip Hop and R&B station ( Hot KiXX 106 )
> before Boston and now Providence hae a FM spanish station
> before Boston and Boston has more people of color than
> Providence .


Again, that is strictly YOUR OPINION. In MY opinion, rap and hip/hop have not only ruined the radio business, they have also ruined the music business. Music that is out now just plain sucks, english or otherwise...
 
WLYN, 1510 and 104.9

Doesn't WLYN (1360 Lynn) broadcast a lot of Spanish? They are heard pretty clearly in the city of Boston, I believe.

As far as FM goes, wouldn't the 104.9 station on the North Shore nbe a prime candidate for Spanish? This station has no numbers to speak of, and does not operate in some newspaper / radio combo-buy cross promotion model like Phoenix-WFNX.

Only problem is that they are not heard right in the city due to WRBB at Northeastern. I do believe that when WRBB is off the air, they come right in.
So why couldn't there be a negotiation to get WRBB to move to another low-power "drop in" frequency?

Anyway, aside from FM, I think WLYN comes in, and it won't be long before 1510 probably goes back to Spanish.<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by HHH on 09/02/05 01:28 AM.</FONT></P>
 
Re: WLYN, 1510 and 104.9

> Doesn't WLYN (1360 Lynn) broadcast a lot of Spanish? They
> are heard pretty clearly in the city of Boston, I believe.

WLYN broadcasts a variety of ethnic programming. I've heard Spanish, Carribean, Haitian, Greek, and a lot of Asian, among others. It's owned by Multicultural, which is an Asian ownership.

Their day signal is pretty good throughout Boston, and it's still in AM Stereo (in the daytime)! The night signal is still fairly listenable.

> As far as FM goes, wouldn't the 104.9 station on the North
> Shore nbe a prime candidate for Spanish? This station has
> no numbers to speak of, and does not operate in some
> newspaper / radio combo-buy cross promotion model like
> Phoenix-WFNX.

WBOQ 104.9 only has a strong signal on the North Shore and Boston's Metro-North suburbs north of Route 16 and the Tobin Bridge. I know it can be heard to the west and south of Boston on good radios, but it's not a strong signal in those areas by any means, and it can't be heard in Boston's neighborhoods due to WRBB.

You can't judge WBOQ's success by it's Boston market ratings because it only covers and intends to serve a small portion of the market, the North Shore, which is not a separate market in itself. If the North Shore were rated as an area on it's own, you might find that 104.9 could be doing quite well there.

That would be like saying that WATD in Marshfield is unsuccessful because it doesn't get significant Boston market ratings, but it serves it's South Shore area very well, and I'm sure it has a healthy listenership in the area.

> Only problem is that they are not heard right in the city
> due to WRBB at Northeastern. I do believe that when WRBB is
> off the air, they come right in.

They come in, but not very well. Besides WRBB, the off-channel intermodulation interference from all the 50 kW (equivalent) FM's on the Pru does a number on it in town.

> So why couldn't there be a negotiation to get WRBB to move
> to another low-power "drop in" frequency?

I don't think WBOQ has strong enough signal coverage in the downtown Boston area to officially warrant making such a request as far as the FCC is concerned. Besides, WRBB was already there in the late 80's when 104.9 raised their power from the old WVCA, which didn't reach Boston whatsoever, to the current WBOQ signal. If the FCC didn't make WRBB move then, I doubt they would now. (In fact, WRBB had to move from 91.7 to 104.9 just a few years earlier to make way for previously adjacent WUMB).

> Anyway, aside from FM, I think WLYN comes in, and it won't
> be long before 1510 probably goes back to Spanish.

That would be a pretty good signal for hitting the urban Boston area Spanish population.
 
Re: WLYN, 1510 and 104.9

> Doesn't WLYN (1360 Lynn) broadcast a lot of Spanish? They
> are heard pretty clearly in the city of Boston, I believe.

It's owned by Multicultural, so it's a brokered station. Although I believe that WLYN is mostly brokered in the Spanish language, it is nothing comparable to the late Mega 890 or Amor 890.

>
> As far as FM goes, wouldn't the 104.9 station on the North
> Shore nbe a prime candidate for Spanish? This station has
> no numbers to speak of, and does not operate in some
> newspaper / radio combo-buy cross promotion model like
> Phoenix-WFNX.

WBOQ has no numbers in Boston because of the lousy signal. In addition, 104.9 does not cover the areas of the North Shore that a Spanish format would work best. 104.9 is best up by Gloucester, while the North Shore's Spanish population is mostly over in Lynn. The Spanish station would have a slightly decent signal in Lawrence, but the signal would also be inaudible in areas such as Brockton and Framingham due to interference from 105.1 WWLI.

Additionally, 104.9 is doing a good job at acting as a Full Service/Oldies outlet, and now has Red Sox rights. I don't think that the owner would either sell the station nor change the format to Spanish, so there's pretty much no hope for a Spanish station on 104.9.
 
WLYN 1360 and WAZN 1470

> Doesn't WLYN (1360 Lynn) broadcast a lot of Spanish? They
> are heard pretty clearly in the city of Boston, I believe.

WLYN 1360 broadcasts most of the day (in AM Stereo)in Brazilian Portuguese. We also broadcast some programming in Spanish, as well as nighttime in Cantonese Chinese.

WAZN 1470 currently broadcasts Spanish music during most of the day, with some Russian weekday mornings and afternoons, Italian/English on Saturdays, and Mandarin Chinese during the nighttime hours. The WAZN air signal is now operating at its licensed specifications.

Both stations are available for lease by the hour, to any interested party.
If you are interested in airtime, please call me at the station, and we can discuss further.


Jeff Kline
General Manager, WLYN/WAZN
 
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