Gregg said:By the way, the Yankees, Marlins and Red Sox all have Spanish language radio broadcasts but NOT the Phillies.
The Phillies are broadcast in Spanish on WUBA 1480.
Gregg said:By the way, the Yankees, Marlins and Red Sox all have Spanish language radio broadcasts but NOT the Phillies.
quadpain said:Gregg said:By the way, the Yankees, Marlins and Red Sox all have Spanish language radio broadcasts but NOT the Phillies.
The Phillies are broadcast in Spanish on WUBA 1480.
Gregg said:Isn't ESPN Deportes almost totally aimed at Mexican-American sports fans? That's why till recently, ESPN Deportes penetration into Eastern U.S. markets has been virtually non-existant.
David Eduardo states that Puerto Rico has no all-sports station, even though there are 6 or 7 AM stations doing talk in Spanish in San Juan. Why are none of them interested in having turn-key, low-cost talk programming from ESPN?
No ESPN Deportes in Boston.
In the press release, Beasley talks about Philadelphia's sizable Hispanic population of nearly 12%.
Yet there is that unspoken but automatic ad sales for Spanish-language radio, no matter how bad the ratings. Larger corporations will put a percentage of their advertising money into Spanish-language media without asking too many questions.
Case in point... WRLX West Palm Beach, which still carries the call letters of its former "relaxing" Soft AC format. Despite a so-so signal, WRLX was sometimes #1 12+ in that market.
Today the station is ranked around #15 in WPB, not even getting a two-share. Yet it makes more money due to "automatic" corporate Spanish-language advertising.
radioguy39nj said:ESPN's English-speaking NY flagship station (1050 ESPN) has one of the worst signals in the market
Gregg said:But on the other hand, I believe if you put a Spanish language station on the air in a sizable market with minimal Hispanic media, even if it gets little or no ratings, you're going to get buys from some large national or regional advertisers automatically.
Those advertisers have decided that a given percentage of thier ad dollars should go to Spanish-language media.
So I'm confident that when it goes on the air, WWDB 860 ESPN Deportes will get ads from some of the big beer, fast food, auto, soda, department store and electronic store accounts, even before it shows up in the ratings.
I've heard Latino stations that barely make the ratings running McDonald's, Wal-Mart and Budweiser ads, something I know I'd never hear if these stations broadcast in English. And I'm talking about stations doing local music programming, not ads that might get carried on the national ESPN Deportes feed.
DanStrassberg said:radioguy39nj said:ESPN's English-speaking NY flagship station (1050 ESPN) has one of the worst signals in the market
Absolute nonsense unless you live southwest of the transmitter site, which, as a poster on the Philadelphia board, you may do. WEPN protects the Mexican border (1050 is a Mexican clear channel; US use of 1050 by a Class B station in New York City operating with 50 kW-U DA-1 is provided for in a special US-Mexican treaty. I believe that the same treaty provides for the Class B AM 1220 in Cleveland, which also runs 50 kW-U DA-1. Like 1050, 1220 is a Mexican clear channel.) In WEPN's case, the protection to Mexico does double duty; it allowed the New York 1050 to be sited a mere 80 miles to the northeast of first-adjacent Class A KYW, which, in turn runs 50 kW DA-1 and protects the New York station.
Sam Lit said:Dan, I thought 1060/Philadelphia is a class B.
Sam Lit said:I see KGA had a downgrade to 15,000 watts. Why the downgrade?
Gregg said:Just out of curiosity, how does CHUM Toronto fit into the question of 1050 WEPN's signal? From the coverage maps at www.radio-locator.com, it looks like WEPN nulls not just to the southwest for Mexico and Philadelphia, but to the entire west, including the northwest, so it doesn't conflict with co-channel CHUM, 300-something miles to the northwest.
Gregg said:CHUM's signal often steps on WEPN in Western New Jersey and the Hudson Valley, leading folks in those areas to complain about AM 1050 and hope for an FM signal for ESPN in the NY market.
Of course, not all 50,000 watt NYC radio stations are omni-directional. If you live in a suburb of NYC that used to be underpopulated farm land 50 years ago, you should not expect to get all the NYC AM stations like you get 660, 770 and 880. On the other hand, it is rough if you're a sports fan and you're missing out on play-by-play for your favorite teams because they're on 1050 WEPN.
Gregg
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evolve991 said:How do they determine a demographic for a population that largely remains unseen and uncounted?
John1 said:An historical reference note: AM 860 as WTEL was Philadelphia's only Spanish language station for many years, as far as I remember from at least the 1960's to late 1990's. Morning drive was purchased by Rev. Harry Bristow who ran contemp. Christian music (English language) to promote his Ambler theatre & bookstore, but the rest of the programming was Spanish, & I believe they ran some Phillies day games. If I remember correctly the programming changed when WWDB 96.5 decided to push their older-demo talk shows to 860 and rebranded it with the WWDB calls. When that didn't work out they went to the business-talk/infomercial format. As WTEL was daytime only, additional Spanish programming ran at night on WCAM/WSSJ and WIBF-FM.