Re: Is WKLU breaking it's Promise; People Get Real!
Hello Indianapolians! Hey, I'm an out of towner. I'm even an out of stater. I live in (& live with) market 18 (Nassau/Suffolk) aka [Long Island NY] which is unfortunately in the shadow of the most corporate of all markets, market #1, NYC.I visited Indianapolis last summer and almost immediately found WKLU 101.9 It seemed to stand out on the dial. I checked all the other stations. Most of them sound like the same tired corporate cookie-cutter pre-fab radio that we got back home. WKLU was different though! I was so impressed by this station that I often listen at home (In New York) over the internet. I am looking forward to visiting Indianapolis again this summer, and one of the main reasons is that I'll be able to listen to WKLU again!I don't see how WKLU could have lied to the listeners. Unless they promised the listeners on the air that they wouldn't play more than 4 spots per hour they are in the clear. It doesn't matter what they said in some magazine. It only matters what they told the listeners on the air.Anyway, you have to recognize that WKLU is an awesome commercial radio station. I wish I had the financial capital to do the same thing in my home market. It's sad to think that Russ Oasis may sell out in a few years, but these things do happen. Are we sure about this? Does he have a track record for doing this sort of thing? Maybe he really does enjoy radio. That's not to say he never will sell the radio station though. About 1 & 1/2 years ago here one of our heritage independant stations sold out for $80 million to Univision so that they could simulcast on it. That station was bought for about $60 million more than it is worth. That just proves that weird things happen in radio. No-one ever thought that the owners would ever sell, but when greedy corporate interest is offering to pay you four times what the station is worth, you're crazy not to take it, no matter how much of a radio-geek you proclaim to be. Maybe that day will come for WKLU, but for now, just as my local WLIR was awesome, WKLU currently isawesome. It's too bad I have to listen to a station that is somewhere between 1/4 to 1/3 of the way across the country from me, but its nice to know that it is there, and that Russ Oasis and his "Kool-Aid" Krew are keepin' it real, at least for now.OK, just thought maybe you all might have been interested in what an outsider had to think about the whole thing. Best Regards, -Lee
Hello Indianapolians! Hey, I'm an out of towner. I'm even an out of stater. I live in (& live with) market 18 (Nassau/Suffolk) aka [Long Island NY] which is unfortunately in the shadow of the most corporate of all markets, market #1, NYC.I visited Indianapolis last summer and almost immediately found WKLU 101.9 It seemed to stand out on the dial. I checked all the other stations. Most of them sound like the same tired corporate cookie-cutter pre-fab radio that we got back home. WKLU was different though! I was so impressed by this station that I often listen at home (In New York) over the internet. I am looking forward to visiting Indianapolis again this summer, and one of the main reasons is that I'll be able to listen to WKLU again!I don't see how WKLU could have lied to the listeners. Unless they promised the listeners on the air that they wouldn't play more than 4 spots per hour they are in the clear. It doesn't matter what they said in some magazine. It only matters what they told the listeners on the air.Anyway, you have to recognize that WKLU is an awesome commercial radio station. I wish I had the financial capital to do the same thing in my home market. It's sad to think that Russ Oasis may sell out in a few years, but these things do happen. Are we sure about this? Does he have a track record for doing this sort of thing? Maybe he really does enjoy radio. That's not to say he never will sell the radio station though. About 1 & 1/2 years ago here one of our heritage independant stations sold out for $80 million to Univision so that they could simulcast on it. That station was bought for about $60 million more than it is worth. That just proves that weird things happen in radio. No-one ever thought that the owners would ever sell, but when greedy corporate interest is offering to pay you four times what the station is worth, you're crazy not to take it, no matter how much of a radio-geek you proclaim to be. Maybe that day will come for WKLU, but for now, just as my local WLIR was awesome, WKLU currently isawesome. It's too bad I have to listen to a station that is somewhere between 1/4 to 1/3 of the way across the country from me, but its nice to know that it is there, and that Russ Oasis and his "Kool-Aid" Krew are keepin' it real, at least for now.OK, just thought maybe you all might have been interested in what an outsider had to think about the whole thing. Best Regards, -Lee