Cumulus is garbage. They hired some moron named "Twitch" for
Mornings on KFOG a few years back. That speaks volumes about their
incompetence...
Aren't stupid names to be expected on free-form/alternative/modern stations? The legendary WBCN Boston had a PD/DJ with the air name of Oedipus and wasn't ridiculed for it.
It seems like the AAA format is pretty much dead in major market radio.
It's been going downhill in popularity for many years now.
Small audience and older demos are a one-two punch on a format that really is better suited for non-commercial radio.
It seems like the AAA format is pretty much dead in major market radio. Corporations that operate in cities don't seem to want to "waste" the frequency, time, and effort on a format that isn't a copy-cat of what is already working for another company. What a shame.
Those listeners aren't going to "mature" to AAA.
As explained by KM and BigA, this is an older demographic format that has limited sales appeal.
I am familiar with the case of LA's last commercial AAA station. It got a low 1-share and had a somewhat older audience in the years prior to 1997, when it flipped format. Today, nearly two decades later, the audience in sales demos would be very small and not competitive.
In LA, Golden West blamed the "bad signal" for the low shares. But when we flipped to Spanish-language Regional Mexican, the station debuted with around a 7 share. Obviously the problem is the format.
Many of the large companies do hybrid, modified or unique formats to fit market conditions. That they don't do AAA is a reflection of the same reasoning that keeps them from doing Smooth Jazz, Beautiful Music, "True" Oldies or Standards: lack of sales potential.
It depends. From what I can see, a portion of them do. The portion that prefers less popular formats and is more into deep cuts and unfamiliar artists. This is the small group who loved progressive rock as kids. When grunge got popular, the rebelled and wanted something else. They tend to love World Café on NPR.
Interesting, shifts in listener tastes is driving these changes.
http://www.sfgate.com/education/article/KFOG-axes-DJs-future-up-in-the-air-7223598.php
SFGate story has 438 comments (and counting) - tells you that there is large interest in KFOG. Cumulus, take note! Hopefully Bryan Schock will introduce a new energized vision while retaining KFOG within the AAA format.
I'm in the camp that believes KFOG will be come a simulcast of KNBR. But who knows.
Let's put that 438 number in perspective. The metro area has over 7,500,000 persons. The largest cuming station reaches over 1.5 million people a week. Even KFOG cumes over 500,000 persons.
So 438 comments actually means that most people don't care. With a 2.2 average share of listening and only a 1.6% share of revenue, the station has been vulnerable for years.
Semoochie mentions KINK in Portland: average of around a 3.5 audience share but a 7 share of revenue. That is a station that has kept up its presence and is in a market where the format is sales-friendly.
SFGate story has 438 comments (and counting) - tells you that there is large interest in KFOG. Cumulus, take note! Hopefully Bryan Schock will introduce a new energized vision while retaining KFOG within the AAA format.
Let's put that 438 number in perspective. The metro area has over 7,500,000 persons. The largest cuming station reaches over 1.5 million people a week. Even KFOG cumes over 500,000 persons.
So 438 comments actually means that most people don't care. With a 2.2 average share of listening and only a 1.6% share of revenue, the station has been vulnerable for years.
Let's put that 438 number in perspective. The metro area has over 7,500,000 persons. The largest cuming station reaches over 1.5 million people a week. Even KFOG cumes over 500,000 persons.
So 438 comments actually means that most people don't care. With a 2.2 average share of listening and only a 1.6% share of revenue, the station has been vulnerable for years.
Semoochie mentions KINK in Portland: average of around a 3.5 audience share but a 7 share of revenue. That is a station that has kept up its presence and is in a market where the format is sales-friendly.
but it's still sad to see what looks like a narrowing of choices on the free FM band