What's it like back there in 2001?
Are you suggesting that the don’t “all do very well”?
Care to expand on that thought?
What's it like back there in 2001?
Are you suggesting that the don’t “all do very well”?
Care to expand on that thought?
Do you read ratings?
Been there and done that in Boston. Unless they are in dire need for cash, and EMF wants a station for Air1, I don't see it happening.Now Audacy is selling stations in Buffalo and Memphis to EMF
Unless they (Audacy) are in dire need for cash, and EMF wants a station for Air1, I don't see it (Audacy selling another Boston area signal to EMF) happening.
I'm not saying this will happen as you suggest, but it would be nice to have the WEEI-FM call sign back on 103.3 where it lived for decades until the 1980s.I can see EMF looking to buy a Boston area station for Air 1. It's probably one of their top priorities.
I thought the longtime principal owner of WXRV-92.5 passed away a couple of years ago, and if my memory serves me correct, several other stations that rebroadcast WXRV were sold after his death to....EMF. They probably would have some interest in WXRV.
If Audacy were to sell a local station to EMF for Air 1, I suspect they'll "blow up" WBGB-103.3, move the WEEI-FM call letters and format to 103.3, and sell the 93.7 stick to EMF for Air 1.
This way, Audacy would get a stronger signal for WEEI in points south of Boston (and $$$ for the 93.7 stick) and EMF would get a Boston area signal for Air 1.
I'm not saying this will happen as you suggest, but it would be nice to have the WEEI-FM call sign back on 103.3 where it lived for decades until the 1980s.
Or maybe 93.7 is so bad as-is that they’d just sell it to EMF outright.I can see EMF looking to buy a Boston area station for Air 1. It's probably one of their top priorities.
I thought the longtime principal owner of WXRV-92.5 passed away a couple of years ago, and if my memory serves me correct, several other stations that rebroadcast WXRV were sold after his death to....EMF. They probably would have some interest in WXRV.
If Audacy were to sell a local station to EMF for Air 1, I suspect they'll "blow up" WBGB-103.3, move the WEEI-FM call letters and format to 103.3, and sell the 93.7 stick to EMF for Air 1.
This way, Audacy would get a stronger signal for WEEI in points south of Boston (and $$$ for the 93.7 stick) and EMF would get a Boston area signal for Air 1.
The Young Sound...That's an interesting idea....The return of WEEI-FM to 103.3...Bring back "The Young Sound" too!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Public File is available online. There is no need for an on-site access point.well you can thank the FCC for dropping the local studio and business office rule a while back, and the Public Inspection File not having to be made available at the studio/business office anymore.
And that was the right decision. Mandating that businesses maintain facilities they don’t need (or don’t need any longer) for some long outdated rule? No thanks.well you can thank the FCC for dropping the local studio and business office rule a while back, and the Public Inspection File not having to be made available at the studio/business office anymore.
Sales will work from home, production will be picked up by Boston probably.
Which airline has only been bankrupt once?Then you look at Audacy’s competitors…IHeart has been in and out bankruptcy more than a troubled airline.
Of the majors, I think Delta once in 2005. American Airlines is the IHeart of US Airlines, but at least unlike IHeart they kept their name. Both are addicted to BK.Which airline has only been bankrupt once?
This - iHeart still has a lot of 50kw AM’s going, and 5kw facilities at the lower end of the band (500-700 kHz range). If the market isn’t too big, they generally have an FM translator, but very rarely have I seen them blow up an FM to simulcast a news/talk AM. Cumulus has largely been the same.My view is that iHeart believes in supporting 50kw AM stations. They believe the replacement for AM is streaming in the iHeart app. Not FM simulcasts or translators.