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JoeLouis
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Whoever says FM news doesn't do well, I think they forget to tell WTOP FM in D.C. (very successful outlet)
If that was your only take away from the last 3 pages, you’ve severely misunderstood this thread.Whoever says FM news doesn't do well, I think they forget to tell WTOP FM in D.C. (very successful outlet)
I remember seeing that station in Maryland use the call sign WNEW-FM during its time as an all-news station. That usage of the call sign made me nostalgic for the radio stations in New York that called themselves WNEW previously. I remember the AM station on "eleven-three-O" that played adult standards. Even as WBBR, the flagship station of Bloomberg Radio, they still pronounce 1130 as "eleven-three-O." I also remember WNEW-FM New York playing AOR music during the 1970s and the 1980s. I'm glad that the call sign WNEW-FM returned to New York's 102.7 FM.Now that you mention it, I do remember what a disaster 101.9 was, I live in the listening area, another disaster was 99.1 in D.C. they tried to go against WTOP, when that didn't work, they tried to become more of a Baltimore news station, (the station was out of Bowie, Md.) that also failed miserably[.]
101.9 was not a "disaster because it was on FM. It failed because it was not a good product compared to the competition.Now that you mention it, I do remember what a disaster 101.9 was, I live in the listening area, another disaster was 99.1 in D.C. they tried to go against WTOP, when that didn't work, they tried to become more of a Baltimore news station, (the station was out of Bowie, Md.) that also failed miserably, then they tried Bloomberg business, I lost track after that.
I used to love WNEW-FM 102.7 in the 70s with Scott Muni and Roscoe, it was the great album rock station in the city, unfortunately where I lived WDRC-FM 102.9 would bleed heavily, I could only listen in the car closer to the city.I remember seeing that station in Maryland use the call sign WNEW-FM during its time as an all-news station. That usage of the call sign made me nostalgic for the radio stations in New York that called themselves WNEW previously. I remember the AM station on "eleven-three-O" that played adult standards. Even as WBBR, the flagship station of Bloomberg Radio, they still pronounce 1130 as "eleven-three-O." I also remember WNEW-FM New York playing AOR music during the 1970s and the 1980s. I'm glad that the call sign WNEW-FM returned to New York's 102.7 FM.
WTOP had been a mostly all-newser from the late 1960s onward (excluding Arthur Godfrey, Larry King, Orioles games, etc.) and fully in the format c. 1998. Same with KCBS and WBBM, both of which thrived after adding an FM signal following equal lengths of tenure with the format. Moving WTOP to FM outright in 2006 turned them into a bona fide powerhouse but it was the furthest thing from a new station.Whoever says FM news doesn't do well, I think they forget to tell WTOP FM in D.C. (very successful outlet)
In KGO-AM's case they had to respond to the median demos going to KQED-FM the NPR News/Talk affiliate and KCBS-AM/KFRC-FM all news by CBS Radio now Audacy for the top 5 spots in the San Francisco area.Startups in the all-news format from the late 2000s onward (KGO, KROI, WYAY, WWWN-WIQI, WEMP, WNEW) have all failed. KGO’s foray does count as a failure and they are still very much on AM. KRLD and WBZ (and maybe KOMO-KNWN) are the most recent successful startups, and they already had established news departments that were expanded upon (such was also the case with KGO, even though it was a move made out of inertia).
KGO management—in particular, the oddly revered GM Mickey Luckoff—killed the station decades ago by failing to adapt the talk format with the times and letting the demos age out of salability. Cumulus was left with not just a lemon, but a very expensive lemon they couldn’t afford to keep running as-is unlike Disney or the bankrupt Citadel.In KGO-AM's case they had to respond to the median demos going to KQED-FM the NPR News/Talk affiliate and KCBS-AM/KFRC-FM all news by CBS Radio now Audacy for the top 5 spots in the San Francisco area.
Instead KQED-FM killed off KGO radio out of the News/talk format in the San Francisco area.
There is very limited overlap between all news and talk formats. And, similarly, the NPR formula of mixed new, talk and entertainment shares little with traditional commercial radio talk.In KGO-AM's case they had to respond to the median demos going to KQED-FM the NPR News/Talk affiliate and KCBS-AM/KFRC-FM all news by CBS Radio now Audacy for the top 5 spots in the San Francisco area.
KGO died due to its inability to win younger listeners and the burnout of the old talent. It self -destructed.Instead KQED-FM killed off KGO radio out of the News/talk format in the San Francisco area.
KGO management—in particular, the oddly revered GM Mickey Luckoff—killed the station decades ago by failing to adapt the talk format with the times and letting the demos age out of salability. Cumulus was left with not just a lemon, but a very expensive lemon they couldn’t afford to keep running as-is unlike Disney or the bankrupt Citadel.
One could reasonably make the case that a significant factor in Citadel's bankruptcy and subsequent sale to Cumulus was overpaying for several expensive white elephants, including KGO.
News has worked better on AM in the past, however, that is not the case anymore. David would be able to expound more on this. Adding a FM signal can help get some more of the younger demographics.It seems News works better on AM, while FM is for Music.
Adding FM slows down attrition, but does not make all-news more attractive to any considerably younger groups. The format is pretty much self limiting.News has worked better on AM in the past, however, that is not the case anymore. David would be able to expound more on this. Adding a FM signal can help get some more of the younger demographics.
And that bump was within the same demographics it always had. Just more listening more often.Here in Atlanta our AM 50k heritage station is WSB. While they are news/talk (heavy on the news), I think they can be a good example. When they finally moved their FM signal (about three or four years ago) to the center of the city, there was a definite bump in ratings and the demographics were affected.
Nationally, AM is getting close to around 5% to 6% of all listening, and more and more is to narrow ethnic and religious and brokered formats. In markets where there are few or no good signals on AM, it is worse. Example: in Washington, DC, the AM listening during the three "Summer" Nielsen months was 1.8%Any news station that wants to survive, will have to eventually move to FM. Here in Atlanta, when WSB turned up their new FM at the center of the city, AM was officially dead in this market. Other markets will have more time before AM totally dies, but it is a slow decline.
"Non-NPR" (commercial) stations can't survive without advertising. You want their content, you either put up with their ads or tune away when they're running. Don't expect them to go ad-free or even cut the number of ads if they have no way to replace that lost revenue.Too many ads for the non-NPR stations