Well, that’s pretty depressing and seems like they just threw away a bunch of shares because a new country station certainly isn’t going to drive more listeners to 101
WTPT made some “adjustments” I noticed starting this week to lure over some of the WROQ listeners, mainly adding more 80s and cutting back on anything post-2000.I would be remiss if I didn't mention how absolutely rotten 93.3's playlist is these days. When did that station become so incredibly lame?
That approach was already tried in the market with Real Rock 104.9, which was a clone of WVBZ. But at that time, the market had 93.3 The Planet and WROQ, leaving little room for it.It reminds me of 105.7 in Greensboro now. Seems like they are trying a "middle lane" approach to try to bridge the gap between WROQ and the former sound of WTPT. I doubt WROQ listeners will be satisfied, and longtime WTPT listeners are going to wonder why their favorite radio station suddenly sounds so wimpy and lame.
Maybe I'll be proven wrong and this will succeed; time will tell.
I don't think those are in market station for GreenvilleI think / prefer some neighboring / market bordering Country Stations, such as 99.3 WCON, 106.1 WNGC, 101.7 WGOG, WCSL 92.9 and 92.1 WMNC, much more appealing IMO with a similar or deeper variety but also sounding much more local.
I don't think those are in market station for Greenville
maybe south carolina is a small state when some Augusta stations have signal in ColumbiaYea, Gotta Be Lucky enough, only certain parts of the Upstate get to hear a Local Station from a Neighboring Market ... Or one that covers only Part of the Market ... That's Difficult in Greenville because its near the Center of the Market, Just like Columbia is near the Geographic Center of SC.
WBAV does gets ratings in GSP but thats likely because of Coverage Reaching Eastern Parts of the Upstate. Distant Listening is rarely promoted tho.... Except in the case of 98.9 WYRD - Who's probably still very proud of Themselves for Being Able to Reach Neighboring Areas near Charlotte, Columbia and Atlanta ... (After Moving to 98.9).
maybe south carolina is a small state when some Augusta stations have signal in Columbia
Hmm, I thought it was just me but Mix’s music (80s, 90s) is better now that it’s on the two inferior signals; but also at 107.9 HD2 for those who have the tuners. I think Catawba county (then north and west) took the biggest signal hit after Mix’s move. Hickory has a LPFM and translator at 99.3 and 100.9, but the HD signal covers Catawba pert near perfectly.I notice Mix Charlotte is playing ALOT More 80s & 90s hits, in addition to current hits. That's something I can kinda tolerate. Magic wasn't like that, they played alot more current hits, then maybe an older hit every few songs or so.
BTW, I was up in Gastonia and Shelby last night, 99.3 was mostly a solid signal the entire way. 100.9 was a better quality signal (in Stereo) but only makes it west to about Kings Mountain before fading…
ironically you can hear the new station on the Iheart radio app
So Iheart can Literally Promote their Local Competition on their platform, and even that wouldn't negatively affect their local stations all that much ... 😉
Audacy doest expect to get any big numbers from this station. Yes, they DO expect to make some money off it, but I'm sure the idea is to syphon some listeners from all the country stations in the market, including some from 99.9, so they can topple those big ratings from iHeart. It will only boost the look of Jamz and, more importantly, WORD. (I know, they don't own Jamz, but I still think they'd rather just tear down iHeart. Summit isn't as nearly big.)I’ll listen to 102.5 The Lake, X-98.5 and The Fan, but this market has become painfully void of any choices. No classic rocker. No AC on a signal I don’t have to change leaving Simpsonville. No classic hits. Charlotte, Columbia and Charleston have all of those formats plus more variety. I generally listen to radio on the iHeart in the car. I actually prefer it over SiriusXM which I also have. It’s nice to hear well programmed, other “local” stations (even if they’re voicetracked), in other markets. GSP has lost all of the variety it had just a half decade ago. The markets I mentioned above actually have basic formats that this market doesn’t even have or can’t support. But we have 3 country stations and 3 or 4 sports talk stations (in a not-big sports market).
There are a lot of religious stations, but most are crappy rimshots/translators or on the non-comm part of the band except for 94.5, 103.3 and 103.9.
I’ll be curious to see what the first full book for 101.1 looks like once the rock numbers are out of the picture.
Nailed it. If they can even slice off a bit of the country duo’s revenue and cut into their numbers, Big Buck will do fine.Audacy doest expect to get any big numbers from this station. Yes, they DO expect to make some money off it, but I'm sure the idea is to syphon some listeners from all the country stations in the market, including some from 99.9, so they can topple those big ratings from iHeart. It will only boost the look of Jamz and, more importantly, WORD. (I know, they don't own Jamz, but I still think they'd rather just tear down iHeart. Summit isn't as nearly big.)
For years the iHeart Greenville cluster has been those country stations. They had to do very little to have a lock on the audience. 102.5 they’d throw a bone to occasionally, 104.9 was always a toss in because the country stations were such monsters, especially WSSL. They didn’t need to compete. Part of me actually likes 101.1 going country because it’s going to wake iHeart up.Audacy doest expect to get any big numbers from this station. Yes, they DO expect to make some money off it, but I'm sure the idea is to syphon some listeners from all the country stations in the market, including some from 99.9, so they can topple those big ratings from iHeart. It will only boost the look of Jamz and, more importantly, WORD. (I know, they don't own Jamz, but I still think they'd rather just tear down iHeart. Summit isn't as nearly big.)