And with KKDV, its signal will be where it needs to be. Almost everywhere outside of The City.
With KBAY being more of a rhythmic friendly station for the past few months before the flip, I think KOSF would benefit more than the rock leaning KITS.Well with these two moves, this could finally benefit Dave FM a bit. There are alot more pros than negatives for these business decisions.
KBAY has a 60 dbu that covers almost the double of that of the "old" country station. And that makes them more than a San Jose suburban station to ad buyers.I agree what a smart move by Alpha Media to jump in and do a country music format flip on KBAY. I heard they are going to call themselves “Bay” country. Nice move with the geographic coverage that extends towards into the city of San Francisco and also heard KKDV will have country music on 92.1 which covers their geographic coverage gap in the East Bay. Finally the Bay Area does have a country music station. Welcome back and thank you Alpha Media!
David I guess this answers my previous wish of a country music return...KBAY has a 60 dbu that covers almost the double of that of the "old" country station. And that makes them more than a San Jose suburban station to ad buyers.
...and they all said it couldn't or wouldn't be done.. b'cuz it woudn't work .. ?David I guess this answers my previous wish of a country music return...
Perhaps KEZR, but still doing well in the demos in the South Bay. So highly unlikely at the moment, but time will tell.Now the question is who will flip to classic hits? Now that kbay is country.
Speaking from personal experience, 94.5 can be picked up in Berkeley (but if you're not near a window expect more scratches than music) - rather surprising considering that Berkeley has a 94.1 transmitter in the hills.Unfortunately, there will be some gaps when it comes to coverage. Looks like Marin county, Western part of San Francisco (Sunset, Richmond, Park Merced, West Portal, Ocean View neighborhoods), Western Fringe of San Mateo County (Pacifica, Half Moon Bay), Western Contra Costa County Berkeley to Vallejo wont be able to hear 94.5 neither 92.1 (92.1 Coverage is only covers Diablo Valley Central/Eastern Contra Costa County).
94.5 comes okay in Richmond but when you head to Pinole Valley that's when the signal totally fringes. Similar signal reach as for South Bay KBRG 100.3. But not too bad compared to KBAY.Speaking from personal experience, 94.5 can be picked up in Berkeley (but if you're not near a window expect more scratches than music) - rather surprising considering that Berkeley has a 94.1 transmitter in the hills.
And this one could be successful in getting full market buys as it covers a much higher percentage of the total market area. Another advantage is in being the only station in the format... that means it can run economically with limited staff salaries, minimal promotional expense and the like.David I guess this answers my previous wish of a country music return...
It does miss all the northern market market counties of San Francisco, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, Solano and Sonoma either entirely or significantly. That is about 35% of the total market population, but when you include shadow areas in the hills and valleys of the East Bay counties, it is more like 40% to 45% that don't have a good in-car and indoor signal.The signal reaches the communities where the vast majority of the probable country audience lives just fine. For areas inside the predicted 60dBu where terrain blockage is an issue, boosters can be deployed.
Good question!Is KBAY running spots on KRTY promoting the change???
Since it appears that the KRTY staff was not hired for the new format, I'm skeptical of their interest in promoting a station that does not include them.The Mercury News has an article up regarding the change.
KBAY should be asking KRTY to post on KRTY's social media pages, too, and they should also be reaching out to TV news outlets.