This is kinda out of our area, but did anyone see who was #1 in the Albany market? It's WAMC(90.3/1400). It pulled an 8.6 in this book;
Yep...lots of NPR stations did very well in this last book.
This is kinda out of our area, but did anyone see who was #1 in the Albany market? It's WAMC(90.3/1400). It pulled an 8.6 in this book;
You can almost guess what the iHeart folks at WGY are saying, "Rigged!"This is kinda out of our area, but did anyone see who was #1 in the Albany market? It's WAMC(90.3/1400). It pulled an 8.6 in this book; three months ago it was at 5.6 . That's mind-numbing. AND it beat the established talker in the area, WGY(810/103.1)by well over 2 points.
It can't have helped WGY that their longtime morning host retired. And WAMC surely benefited from all the attention that's been on state capitol news for the last few months.You can almost guess what the iHeart folks at WGY are saying, "Rigged!"
Albany is the state capitol, and with the pandemic, WAMC seems to have benefited.
But still, a jump like that seems kind fluky.
It can't have helped WGY that their longtime morning host retired.
Wait, you're saying that people are choosing local content over syndication? Those pesky local hosts are beating big-time talent?And the rest of WGY's day is syndicated. Meanwhile WAMC has a lot of local talk shows.
This from the guy who's known for fervently beating the "local doesn't matter" drum on these boards. Chortle.And the rest of WGY's day is syndicated. Meanwhile WAMC has a lot of local talk shows.
This from the guy who's known for fervently beating the "local doesn't matter" drum on these boards.
Weekdays, WAMC devotes on average 6 hours of programming that's locally based.
BigA: What mystifies me is why WBFO doesn't do more local programming of their own.
However, remember that this is a diary market, so "October" is really a piece of July, August and September and just a part of October. In other words, pre-elections. The January book is really from the Election period forward. So some of the variation from traditional numbers may be due to the election period. We won't know until we flush out the election-to-innauguration period, and that won't be until May.Actually, the trends between WAMC & WGY have been apparent for months. Consider:
October: WGY 7.2, WAMC 5.6
November: WGY 7.9, WAMC 6.9
December: WAMC 7.2, WGY 6.6
January: WAMC 8.6, WGY 6.1
I mean really... 810 WGY a 50kW blowtorch legacy (what used to be called a) 1A clear needs an assist from a Class A FM?I also wonder about the difference of WGY having only a partial coverage Class A FM vs WAMC being 10 kw at nearly 2,000 feet and covering even more than the MSA? If you look at Syracuse, the situation is the opposite: WSYR beats WRVO almost two to one with a closer signal equivalent.
C'mon, man... the station comes in on the fillings in your teeth.
Even though the coverage puts a 60 dbu over less than half the Nielsen MSA, I'd bet that the FM accounts for 60% t least, of the listening. And {probably near 80% of the 25-54 listeners.That may be, but I suspect more people listen on 103.1 FM.
The "60% at least, of listening" is worth looking into. Not sure you'd win that beer and wings bet... yet.Even though the coverage puts a 60 dbu over less than half the Nielsen MSA, I'd bet that the FM accounts for 60% t least, of the listening. And {probably near 80% of the 25-54 listeners.
I'd even bet a copla' beers and wings that the sales demos would not change if the AM totally went away.
Could it simply be that WAMC offers programming that Capitol District listeners find more compelling, useful and interesting than the programming on WGY.