93.3 will be K-Love. It's a 50k equivalent full market signal, whereas 105.3, a class A licensed to Mukwonago is not. If anything they would change or sell that one.I find it odd that on the website the list of currently played songs still shows what would be on the air now if Air 1 didn't take over the signal and online feed. I wonder what the delay in changing 93.3 is. Here in the Greenville SC market when K Love launched the two signals that flipped to Air 1 soon followed suit within the hour. I still wonder if 93.3 will be traded to another market that K Love wants since they own 105.3fm but I figured that would be announced by now.
That's so odd. Usually they cut the old stream when the station turns over. So now they have access to the FM1021 IP? Doesn't make sense too me.
I wouldn't be surprised if someone bought the FM1021 IP and turned it into an online station.
That's so odd. Usually they cut the old stream when the station turns over. So now they have access to the FM1021 IP? Doesn't make sense too me.
I wouldn't be surprised if someone bought the FM1021 IP and turned it into an online station.
I find it odd that on the website the list of currently played songs still shows what would be on the air now if Air 1 didn't take over the signal and online feed. I wonder what the delay in changing 93.3 is. Here in the Greenville SC market when K Love launched the two signals that flipped to Air 1 soon followed suit within the hour. I still wonder if 93.3 will be traded to another market that K Love wants since they own 105.3fm but I figured that would be announced by now.
I still wonder if 93.3 will be traded to another market that K Love wants since they own 105.3fm but I figured that would be announced by now.
Attempts were made.After the deal was announced, there was some talk that one of the two stations might be sold or traded, but that went silent quickly. With the intellectual property going to iHeart, 93.3 would offer nothing but stick value to a commercial buyer. At this point, it almost certainly has more value to K-Love than it does to anyone else in the market, and not many people would want to enter the market with just one station.
Klove bought two signals in the Twin Cities but decided to spin one off to another Christian format leaving K Love only on a translator while Air One got the better C3 signal.
So, three reasons for that as was already alluded to below:Klove bought two signals in the Twin Cities but decided to spin one off to another Christian format leaving K Love only on a translator while Air One got the better C3 signal.
Your analysis is very spot on. (I was near the market at the time that all went down.)So, three reasons for that as was already alluded to below:
1. If you look at the coverage area for the station they sold off (for exactly half the purchase price of the pair) the coverage area is actually very similar to their translator at 99.9, 95.3 would have added very little value.
2. 95.3 sold for exactly half of the purchase price of the two signals, so K-Love saw it as a good deal AND it sold to the people who owned it before it was sold and converted to a commercial station, another local CCM brand. Side note that the old owner not only got a good deal on the 95.3 frequency, but they made out like bandits on the original sale, having gotten nearly $8 million for the signal either in cash or in barter agreements, later buying it back for $1.3 million.
3. EMF/K-Love has a long standing relationship with the owners of KTIS (the popular CCM station in town started by Billy Graham decades prior). In the past, that mattered and they didn't want to compete. This changed after the sale of 95.3 and may not be true if the transaction had occurred today.
It's also important to note that EMF at the time didn't really "want" the stations as neither one is really a full market signal, but the previous owners increasingly got desperate to offload it. It had been on the market for years prior, but the original asking price for the pair was WAY too high. By the time they got desperate enough to sell it, we were in the midst of the COVID 19 recession and most other station groups were struggling even to survive. I'd speculate that had they come close to the final selling price PRIOR to the pandemic we might have seen another owner (Likely either Hubbard or CBS/Entercom) pick them up at that price, but they just simply couldn't justify it at the time the sale happened. That's speculation on my part but I also suspect they aren't "Done" in Minneapolis, simply waiting for another owner with a full market signal to get desperate enough to make a deal.
I'd believe that, but the 105's combined aren't really a "full market" signal either. When ABC first bought them in the 90's they had an opportunity to upgrade (I'm guessing at quite a large cost) but now they are pretty shoe-horned in. 105.1 indeed does a good job covering the south metro, 105.7 was downgraded to "just above translator" status and put on the IDS to better cover the "core" cities, and 105.3 covers the north suburbs (strongest signal of the 3 but largely covers not much due to location), but the three signals do have quite a few "gaps" in city grade coverage, mainly in the east and west metro area which are both growing quite rapidly.Your analysis is very spot on. (I was near the market at the time that all went down.)
I believe Lance mentioned on a different thread that the 105s were likely to go in a separate transaction (I believe tied to an initial one in Dallas before Salem happened), but fell through.
Won't be until the license transfers are actually approved. But yes, I think it's pretty likely too that 93.3 becomes WLVE.With the FCC open again I wonder when WLVE will move to 93.3 and 102.1/105.3 Air 1 gets new calls.