Radiofornia said:.
Regardless of what the consultants say, there is still a viable audience for Salsa in Florida. I hope Z92 in Miami and Salsa 98.1 in Orlando lead the way for a resurgence of the genre in radio. However, if they're going to play 5 bachatas per hour and start doing reggaeton mix shows at night, it will be DOA.
Morpheux said:Programming wise,99.7 is by far more in tact with the Salsa classics,jingles and all around presentation.They run a fine operation for a LPFM and do well with their targeted audience in Kissimmee. There was lots of static at 98.1 on Thursday.Seems like they were redirecting their signal?
DavidEduardo said:Further, salsa tends to be a blue collar music, and much of the Puerto Rican migration to Orlando consists of professionals and bilinguals who were escaping the social and economic conditions on the Island; this is not a salsa audience to begin with.
DavidEduardo said:Morpheux said:Programming wise,99.7 is by far more in tact with the Salsa classics,jingles and all around presentation.They run a fine operation for a LPFM and do well with their targeted audience in Kissimmee. There was lots of static at 98.1 on Thursday.Seems like they were redirecting their signal?
WBVL-LP is non-directional, per FCC data. What you may have noticed is some kind of skip on the same channel that was chewing up the signal.
At only 100 watts at 81 feet, this LPFM only has 76,000 persons in its 60 dbu contour. And at such low power, it is rather severely subject to e-skip, inversions and all the other FM propagation issues