WBEN has had a ratings and billing grip on the market for quite some time, but sooner or later Entercom will have to make a decision about the future of Buffalo’s only commercial news-talk AM radio station. Recent 12+ trends (as unreliable as they may be) indicate WBEN is beginning to slip. But those with access to the complete rating book say WBEN, although strong, is losing audience shares at a consistent rate to 97 Rock, The Edge and WYRK.
How long it will be before the Entercom decision makers decide to simulcast WBEN programming on FM? The question remains: What frequency? Entercom owns only three FM frequencies in Buffalo. Kiss and Star are immensely successful. There’s no way Entercom would disrupt those two FM cash cows. The Lake, on the other hand, remains flat. Could WBEN find its way to 107.7 in a simulcast situation?
What then would become of WGR? Would the sports station be left to wilt on the AM vine? Or does WGR programming move to FM, as is the case with so many sports stations, particularly Entercom’s sports franchise in Boston, leaving WBEN to go quietly into that good night that awaits AM radio.
The move to FM may be moot if Wi-Max makes an impact. If Wi-Max becomes a reality, AM could be a memory by 2015, with only the strong signaled 50 gallon major market AMs surviving. Consider how much healthier the broadcasting business was in 2005 and the downturn it’s taken in the last two years. 2015 is by no means the distant future.
How long it will be before the Entercom decision makers decide to simulcast WBEN programming on FM? The question remains: What frequency? Entercom owns only three FM frequencies in Buffalo. Kiss and Star are immensely successful. There’s no way Entercom would disrupt those two FM cash cows. The Lake, on the other hand, remains flat. Could WBEN find its way to 107.7 in a simulcast situation?
What then would become of WGR? Would the sports station be left to wilt on the AM vine? Or does WGR programming move to FM, as is the case with so many sports stations, particularly Entercom’s sports franchise in Boston, leaving WBEN to go quietly into that good night that awaits AM radio.
The move to FM may be moot if Wi-Max makes an impact. If Wi-Max becomes a reality, AM could be a memory by 2015, with only the strong signaled 50 gallon major market AMs surviving. Consider how much healthier the broadcasting business was in 2005 and the downturn it’s taken in the last two years. 2015 is by no means the distant future.