Re: Heritage stations
Well, then the problem becomes where we draw that line. Is there that much difference between 50 years and 45?
Is KNX not a heritage station today, but if nothing changes by 2018, it will become one?
Given the speed of change in our world, and the historic runs of legendary stations (KMPC only had 28 years as a personality MOR/AC, WABC only had 22 as Top 40), I think it may be more realistic to set the bar at 25 or 30 years.
Frequency changes should reset the clock, as should a shift of more than one-third of the programming from live & local to satellite.
FredLeonard said:It's interesting how many people posted call letters before any attempt to agree on a definition of "heritage." A lot of stations toss the word around. In station promotion, it seems to mean they've had the format longer than their competitors in the same format.
If we set the bar at 50 years, same calls, same city, same format, there are very few "heritage" stations.
Do we allow changes of owners?
Or change of frequency? Like WQXR-FM. It's been classical forever, but in the FCC license files, it's a different station.
Do we allow for formats to evolve? If a station flips from full service to all news, with a (mostly) clean break (like WBBM), it seems like that should reset the clock. But if a station evolves from full service and over time become talk (like WGN), then the clock keeps running.
What about wholesale personnel changes, especially going from local-live to syndicated or voice-tracked. Seem to me they aren't "heritage" no matter how long they stay with a format. Only local-live stations should be considered.
Well, then the problem becomes where we draw that line. Is there that much difference between 50 years and 45?
Is KNX not a heritage station today, but if nothing changes by 2018, it will become one?
Given the speed of change in our world, and the historic runs of legendary stations (KMPC only had 28 years as a personality MOR/AC, WABC only had 22 as Top 40), I think it may be more realistic to set the bar at 25 or 30 years.
Frequency changes should reset the clock, as should a shift of more than one-third of the programming from live & local to satellite.