TheBigA said:
neo11 said:
The oldies fans with WCBS-FM proved it,
That's a very different demo. And I think they're a bigger target. I think they're losing a bunch of them because of their music policies. But they're getting enough to get good numbers.
It is the same kind of example though. And if they are losing some listeners, it certainly is a very small amount, judging by their continued strong ratings. Even a lot of the whiners and complainers about CBS-FM on this board and the dentist board still claim to listen to the station. There's a reason for that.
neo11 said:
Again, the fact that Country 92.5 doesn't show up AT ALL in the Nassau-Suffolk book, not even with an 0.1, is very telling.
They don't target that market at all. If you're relying on an accidental audience, that's what you get. If a country station in NYC is programmed like WWYZ, it too will get a .1. Well, maybe a .5. That's my point.
Neither do the other out of market stations, and some of them show up with well over a one share and ahead of local, LI stations. Star 99.9 has a 1.4 in the latest Nassau-Suffolk book, and it's an AC format that already has plenty of options on LI in WALK, WKJY, etc., plus the NYC stations. If there was an audience for country, it would be there.
As for your comments about WWYZ, you have to realize they are purely subjective based on your own apparent tastes. Certainly whatever WWYZ is doing doesn't seem to be preventing it from being #4 in its market, but if you're telling me that country listeners in Long Island are *so* much different than the ones across the sound in Connecticut that they would refuse to listen to the type of programming and music found on WWYZ, I would just find that immensely hard to believe. The reality is that the audience is not there.
neo11 said:
Dallas is a FAR different market from NYC and I'll go out on a limb here and say that it is far more country friendly.
That's not my point. As I said, country is top rated in non-country markets like Seattle and Cleveland. But those stations are programmed to their markets. My point is that for country to work in NYC, it needs to be a non-cuntry station, as WHN was.
Seattle and Cleveland are much more country-friendly, demographically, than the NYC market is. They are more white, and less urban overall, and that benefits country stations. Looking at the Seattle numbers, I also see a Christian AC as #4. That would never happen in NYC. I think that is one example that illustrates just how different a market Seattle is from NYC. And Cleveland? Well let's just say that Cleveland is much more "midwestern" than NYC is. For instance, their #1 CHR station is #10 overall in the market. Big difference from NYC.
Beyond that, you: 1) completely ignored my comment regarding Dallas being country-friendly and not a suitable comparison to NYC, and 2) you're saying that a country station needs to be non-country. For that to happen, as you've also said, it needs to have a heavy dose of AC to it. What you would get then is the following:
1. Country "purists" coming out of the woodwork complaining that their country station is full of non-country music, much the same way the oldies "purists" are complaining about the 80s music and the lack of 50s music on CBS-FM.
2. An uphill battle going up against established AC powerhouses in an oversaturated AC market in the city and the suburbs. Typically, the last one in the game is the one that loses, when that happens. And if you add to it a perception that it is a "country" station, you'll see the advertisers flee as well. That's just the reality of it. If Fresh, which is a much more "contemporary" station for NYC, can hover in the mid 2's-low 3's, I can't see an AC-leaning country getting above a 2 share, at its very very best, and that may be too optimistic.
neo11 said:
And what about the advertisers? Revenue? If you want to put a station on the air that is a tough sell in NYC
I agree and I think THAT is the real reason you don't see a country station in NYC. Not programming or lack of audience.
No, it's all of the above. Lack of audience, lack of appeal for that sort of programming (in big enough numbers to support it), and the advertisers. But the advertisers would come around if the listeners really were there. When you're hovering around a 1.9 that isn't usually going to be the case unless you score VERY highly in some coveted demo, which country wouldn't do.