radioguybroadcasting said:
neo11 said:
You're contradicting yourself. You admitted yourself that they are unviable. Yet they haven't switched...not to dance, not to any format. Does that mean that there's no other viable formats for a full-power FM station in NYC? No way. In fact, I don't even think those rock formats are unviable. They're only unviable in their current state and the ratings have proven that, just as the PPM numbers proved that Pulse, with all of its many limitations and its short time on the air, has done rather well.
As "un-viable" as those formats are, don't you think of Dance would bring better numbers, those stations.. RXP and KRock would pick up dance?
neo11.. I've been sayin that, thanks for agreeing with me!
I wasn't agreeing with you, unless you're agreeing that you were contradicting yourself.
My points were:
- There are un-viable formats on the NYC dial right now, and those companies haven't made a move on either format yet. By which I am trying to say that these big companies don't always make the right decisions.
- Pulse with all of its limitations has really done quite well, and it's likely that a full-powered station like Pulse would do well in the ratings.
With 700,000 jobs lost thus far this year nationally (and the announcement yesterday that Citigroup is laying off another 50,000 workers), I just don't think people are in the mood for current dance music. When 'KTU signed on in '96, the economy had emerged from the steep recession of the early '90s and people, supposedly, were in more of a party mood, and the station capitalized from it. It's patently obvious that today is vastly different from 12 years ago!
With that logic, CHR formats should be drying up during times of economic recession as well. I have a counter-argument for you: people might want to hear dance and other upbeat music more than ever, to get their minds off of their troubles.