He currently lists his position as COO of Merlin Media as "past" with an end date of December 2011.
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/walter-sabo/3/597/b27
Hmmm...
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/walter-sabo/3/597/b27
Hmmm...
My kinda guy.Bugsy said:More than likely he was shown the door....and then kicked down the stairs by most of the people working at the station. This might be a new personal best for Walter....it generally takes just a few weeks for him to piss off and alienate most everyone in the building!!
Wondering whether or not 101.9 continues as a news station is akin to wondering if someone walking down the street is going to enter the next house or keep walking.NewsStud said:I always thought this guy was a sham.
His one arguable success in New Jersey wasn't even his own brainchild. And this event is proof positive that just because you may have some ability to run a talk station, you don't necessarily understand how radio news works.
With all the buzz around the second-coming of all-news radio, this guy and this company have been horribly executing what should be a winning idea.
badjef said:New York is different. You run out of FM signals before you run out of commuting distance. Another market, you commute inside the stronger FM signals.
DavidEduardo said:badjef said:New York is different. You run out of FM signals before you run out of commuting distance. Another market, you commute inside the stronger FM signals.
You have to remember that in-car listening is considerably less than in other markets. In the diary, which split out at-work and in-car, we saw nationally about 30% to 31% of listening was in the car, while NYC was around 25%. While the PPM may throw off different numbers (we have no way of knowing) the fact is that in-car is about 25% than in Philadelphia or Cleveland or Kansas City.
So, while commute times may be long, listening during commutes is nowhere as significant as any other US market... due to heavy use of public transit.
I would rather have 25% in New York than 31% anywhere else. The shear numbers themselves are good enough.DavidEduardo said:badjef said:New York is different. You run out of FM signals before you run out of commuting distance. Another market, you commute inside the stronger FM signals.
You have to remember that in-car listening is considerably less than in other markets. In the diary, which split out at-work and in-car, we saw nationally about 30% to 31% of listening was in the car, while NYC was around 25%. While the PPM may throw off different numbers (we have no way of knowing) the fact is that in-car is about 25% than in Philadelphia or Cleveland or Kansas City.
So, while commute times may be long, listening during commutes is nowhere as significant as any other US market... due to heavy use of public transit.