jas2525 said:
What really makes her presence more rificulous, is that WBEN is the only game in town, unlike many other markets where there is solid talk competition.
Really? Solid talk competition? Like where?
Let's look at Los Angeles, the media capital of America. The #1 station is Clear Channel's talk station KFI. So who is the "solid talk competion?" KABC? Are you kidding? The Dodgers just quit them!
In Chicago, you have the legendary WGN. Always a market leader. Who is their "solid talk competition?" WLS? Really? Cumulus is doing better in Chicago than LA, but that's not saying much. In DC, the NPR station is killing the commercial stations. Where is the "solid talk competition?" Once again, it's Cumulus in 20th place. Call that solid?
Let's go to a market of similar size to Buffalo: Hartford. Near the top of the pack, you have WTIC. So who's the "solid talk competition?" Head down to Tampa, and you see the same thing with WFLA. Who dares to compete with KMOX in St Louis?
Sure there are a couple markets where there is a talk alternative. Pittsburgh, Seattle, and New Orleans. But the competitor is on FM, not AM.
It's not a function of ownership. There are lots of competing owners in all these other markets. What there's a shortage of is "solid talk competition." I believe the AM dial can only sustain one talk station. If Entercom sold KB, I have serious doubts that a new owner could come up with comptitive programming to make it worth doing financially. Especially if the new owner went with all live & local staff. The REAL talk competition, as I look around the country, isn't coming from commercial AM radio. But NPR. In Boston, San Francisco, and Minneapolis. And they're doing it with national news shows and interview shows. Not the single host, conservative talk format that's been dominating AM for the past 20 years. And conservatives want to shut 'em down.