WINS had baseball (Yankees) in the late 70s.I think WINS was news 24/7 without talk shows, post-top 40.
WINS had baseball (Yankees) in the late 70s.I think WINS was news 24/7 without talk shows, post-top 40.
He also does TV reports...syndicated? Locally WFXT:25..... since Consumer Advocate Clark Howard retired from traditional radio. He's still around. Just doing podcasts now.
Try to understand that I used the term "news-talkers" as it is commonly used, and not in a strictly literal sense. Except for 1010 WINS and 1060 KYW, all of the other stations I listed are indeed "news/talk". And most of you should know that many stations which carry very little local news, relying largely on the feed from Fox News, will identify as "news/talk".When CBS still owned RADIO stations, there was this lineup of news-talkers:
1010 WINS, NY
1020 KDKA, Pittsburgh
1030 WBZ, Boston
1060 KYW, Philly
1080 WTIC, Hartford AND KRLD, Dallas
I have to agree with you on this, as my wife's car radio is HD. The audio from the HD-2, IMHO, knocks the socks off of what I've heard from their stream. I wasn't knocking HD, I was hitting on STREAMING, you know, as in what you get from mobile toys and so-called "smart"-speakers. WBZ does not plug its HD-2 feed; it plugs its stream on "the iHeartRadio app".It's absolutely stunning on WXKS-HD2.
Was I being nostalgic? I was saddened to hear when WBZ with its legendary Bruce Bradley and WINS with its legendary Murray Kaufman were going from music to all news.Am I just being nostalgic? I can read the demos and ratings and I sense inevitability—but I’m just saddened to see the truly legendary WCBS Newsradio going Sports.
KFWB had a vastly inferior signal that no longer reached most of the areas where English as the primary language speakers lived.The thing that got WCBS-AM to flip formats is very much like how KFWB Los Angeles had to change formats
The New York City Market is vastly more than Manhattan and the boroughs.One of the examples here is that their sister station is more dominant in all news in the radio market. In Los Angeles that's 50kw KNX-AM and 21 kw KNX-FM which covers most of the southland.
Like wise in New York it's WINS-AM and WINS-FM covers the 5 boroughs well.

Agencies and clients don't look at P1 and other listening levels. They look at the AQH rating or Average Quarter Hour Persons. It does not matter how long each one listens, just how many there are when each ad runs.Look at the age of their P1 audience.
Remember, Canada has been going through a multi-decade process of reducing and eliminating the number of AM stations. How long ago did the 50,000 watt CBC stations in Montréal and Toronto go silent?CHML, a 50,000 watt news-talk station in Hamilton, Ontario has also shut down. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamilton/900-chml-global-news-radio-closing-hamilton-1.7294411
“cash cow” is a relative term. And in terrestrial AM radio “relative” equals close to “they cash flow SOMETHING”Was I being nostalgic? I was saddened to hear when WBZ with its legendary Bruce Bradley and WINS with its legendary Murray Kaufman were going from music to all news.
Today I (in New Hampshire) reach for the radio dial to change to WBZ and WINS comes in so loud that I land on it instead.
Today I suspect that WBZ is iHeart's Boston area cash cow while sisters WRKO and WXKS in their same Medford building are their primary content (political) disseminators.
Am I being nostalgic? I miss WNAC's (now today's WRKO) 15 minute hourly newscasts. The ubiquitous 5 minute newscasts rehash the same stories over and and over again. Even WBZ claiming to be Boston's news station seems to be rehashing the same stories too often. I only wish there was an "all request" show where callers give a headline of a few words and the station puts a complete news clip on the air.
They don't give a damn about news or information.
I think the ratings of many NPR affiliated stations in this country and the remaining all news stations woukd show otherwise.Unfortunately, the AM band is going the way of the dinosaur. People want to hear music on FM and the Internet. They don't give a damn about news or information.
And the age demographics don't matter to those stations, just how willing their listeners of any age are to donate. But commercial news stations, like all commercial stations, need to attract younger listeners because conventional wisdom at the agencies and the advertisers themselves is that 55+ is too set in its ways to respond to advertising.I think the ratings of many NPR affiliated stations in this country and the remaining all news stations woukd show otherwise.
That is just part of it. Another is that people over 55 are empty nesters and buy a lot less. And yet another is that the older a person gets, the more habits and customs they have; that means it is harder to pry them loose from a favored brand. And one more: those over retirement age living on just Social Security have far less spendable income... because conventional wisdom at the agencies and the advertisers themselves is that 55+ is too set in its ways to respond to advertising.
Yes and also we mentioned in past examples that WCBS-AM aimed for the New York area suburbs during the time they were all news. How much do we have to consider stations like WNYC, WLIW-FM, New Jersey Public Radio and Connecticut Public Radio WNPR getting some of the suburban listeners.KFWB had a vastly inferior signal that no longer reached most of the areas where English as the primary language speakers lived.
WINS actually has the inferior signal to WCBS and WINS on AM misses a bunch of the farther out area in New Jersey that are part of the market.
The New York City Market is vastly more than Manhattan and the boroughs.
View attachment 7504
This is the New York Metro Survey Area (in red surrounding Manhattan). More than half the population is not in the boroughs.
First, there is only a fragment of one Connecticut county in the New York MSA. And it is likely that those people consider themselves NYC people, not CT people.Yes and also we mentioned in past examples that WCBS-AM aimed for the New York area suburbs during the time they were all news. How much do we have to consider stations like WNYC, WLIW-FM, New Jersey Public Radio and Connecticut Public Radio WNPR getting some of the suburban listeners.
Which of iHeart's FMs do you suggest be flipped to a WBZ simulcast?Hopefully WBZ will get on an analog FM soon.