Is it any better performing during Lazlo's show, given he's FROM Detroit and Julia (who's on the show) is broadcasting from there?
I don't have full Detroit data, so I looked at a nearby market, Chicago.For most stations, cume is still 30% to 35% off from pre-COVID levels. Some stations (such as WYCD) are off 40%.
This year's January and February cume on persons 18+ is just 8% below that of the same months in 2000.
I'm very familiar with the Detroit market. Top cume stations used to be in a bandwidth of between 800,000 and 1.1 million listeners. This was in 2018/2019. WYCD used to be in the upper 700,000 range.
Completely agree with you regarding the state of country music.
The programming changes at Audacy's stations in Detroit coupled with compensation structure have been so unpopular with the sales department, that ten salespeople - including a sales manager - have voluntarily resigned since last December, according to one well known subscription-based blogger.
Considering how often he HAS been right, way to expose yourself as an empty shill.Hahaha Jerry Del Colliano. The hater of big radio companies. I wouldn't take anything he says as true.
Considering how often he HAS been right, way to expose yourself as an empty shill.
Hmmm....Coliano? Cumulus under Dickey buying CBS?I'd put the percentage of right vs wrong as mostly on the wrong side. But if you have proof of what he says in Detroit, feel free to post it. What I see is that the current sales manager has been in place for two years. The sales staff is not in charge of programming. If they're unhappy with the programming, they're free to leave, but it's not what they do. Compensation structure is a different issue, and people leave companies over compensation all the time.
The show in & of itself isn't bad, but it sounds like something that belongs on WGN or Real Radio 104.1.
Orlando seems to be the only place "Hot Talk" has ever worked. The Stern-anchored ones (including Detroit if I remember right) all fell by the wayside when Howard went satelliteReal Radio gets great ratings in Orlando. I think it would do well in Detroit. Get Kid Rock to host a show. Or Uncle Kracker.
Orlando seems to be the only place "Hot Talk" has ever worked. The Stern-anchored ones (including Detroit if I remember right) all fell by the wayside when Howard went satellite
If you like it, good for you. But as somebody who listens to both old and new music in the genre, I don't think new music in the "alternative" genre is necessarily low quality. (I can't comment on the 98.7's playlist, as I don't listen to the station.)98.7's automation issues and high use of PSAs to fill open commercial space makes the station sound like amateur hour, but I will say this - the music played during the evening show has improved noticeably in the past two weeks. I'm hearing more in the way of proven gold hits and less reliance on low quality new music.