there's an article source on radioinsight about KYMT "93.1 The Mountain" crumbling Las Vegas, so that means that station crumbling to different format?
Looks like Lance has put that story behind the paywall, so I guess you'll just have to either subscribe or wait until whatever is being referred to in the headline comes to pass.
Looks like Lance has put that story behind the paywall, so I guess you'll just have to either subscribe or wait until whatever is being referred to in the headline comes to pass. Maybe a format change, maybe an imaging change, maybe something related to the station's internet presence.
In the age of print, a headline was supposed to draw you into a story by telling you the basics of what was being reported: "City man killed in auto accident on I-95." If you weren't interested, you just didn't read it, and the paper suffered no financial loss from that unless you stopped buying the paper completely because nothing in it was interesting you anymore.
Now, with websites like RadioInsight doing what newspapers used to, the primary purpose of a headline is to get the reader to click on that headline and read the story while being fed advertisements that weren't displayed on the main page: "Tragedy on the Interstate devastates local family." Like the "crumbling" headline on the KYMT article on RadioInsight, this headline is unspecific; it doesn't even say there was an accident, or even a vehicle. But it attracts click-through precisely BECAUSE of that!
The advertiser, the website's owner, and Google or whoever is feeding the ads and gathering data on who's clicking through don't care all that much if you are disappointed or even uninterested in the article itself (although it would please the publisher if you found the content informative). For them, the headline has done its job -- getting the reader to click on it. And if that click leads to a paywall, so be it. The reader can choose to pay or not. But he's still clicked through and seen (albeit briefly) whatever adverting was on that page. And Google now knows what sort of ads, stories and suggestions to send that reader every time he gets online.

there's an article source on radioinsight about KYMT "93.1 The Mountain" crumbling Las Vegas, so that means that station crumbling to different format?
Looks like Lance has put that story behind the paywall, so I guess you'll just have to either subscribe or wait until whatever is being referred to in the headline comes to pass. Maybe a format change, maybe an imaging change, maybe something related to the station's internet presence.
There is a free tier which I just registered for but there doesn't seem to be an article there. Other articles seem to work but not that one. And looking at the ratings they're in the upper half of the list. They're no KKLZ for sure but they're not floundering with almost no audience.
Yeah, no disrespect to Lance (a man's gotta eat), but this has become epidemic.
If you go to the RI Facebook page, there are comments there that predict a format change, perhaps to CHR.
Apparently The Mountain is being killed by The Point, and Vegas can't support two classic rockers.
CHR wouldn't make sense either. They'd be fighting KLUC. The question is, what is under represented in Vegas that has a chance of working?
That's not the only question. When you're talking about iHeart, the question is which format works best for their cluster and their national strategy?
That's usually more of a sales question than a programming question.
radioinsight.com
What is your thinking on that?I have a feeling another major commercial FM stick in Vegas will also flip in 2026. I'd wager on KXTE being that station.
Flipping to CHR would've been a foolish move.
Beasley has experience doing sports radio in much larger cities. They own one of the top billing stations in the entire country, 98.5 The Sports Hub in Boston. I could see 107.5 going Sports.
Are the radio rights for the A's spoken for yet?
Variety Hits, it is!
I like the move a lot. Flipping to CHR would've been a foolish move.
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KYMT Returns To Variety Hits As Neon 93.1
iHeartMedia flipped Classic Rock "93.1 The Mountain" KYMT Las Vegas to Variety Hits "Neon 93.1" at noon today. The companyradioinsight.com
Las Vegas in my opinion will get All Sports or at least some sort of commercial spoken word format on a major FM stick at some point (no, 101.5 doesn't count...LOL).
that new format on 93.1 playing literally everything, so that comparing may not be necessary to "sunny 106.5" (unless it's for just in case that "sunny 106.5" playing christmas music on nov to dec)Interesting. I'm gonna have to compare this with Sunny 106.5