It's 4th in 18-34 in a very fragmented market at a time when most CHRs are down considerably,.In the latest shares KGGI is now at a 2.1 it's been sinking slowly but surely in the shares. What can be done to salvage the "heritage" station? I remember that KGGI used to always be in the top 3 for 18-34 women and 18 to 49. Years ago What happened?
David said its 4th in the key demo 18 to 34. I wonder how the 25 to 49 age group is doing?They need to bring back Bob West. He'll know what to do to bring the ratings back up.
It's problem is signal. While it does cover 90% of the market with a 60 dbu, it's 65 dbu and 70 dbu signals are much more limited and miss much of the market.It's probably too Rhythmic for the market.
Should be even less mainstream.The heritage of that station (even in it's heyday) was somewhere in between a Mainstream and a Rhythmic station. More Dua Lipa, Ed Sheeran, Adele... basically all the Mainstream stuff that doesn't sound too alternative or Tik-Tokey would totally work.
The urban stuff is fine.Less Capella Grey, Meek Mill, Wale and the really urban sounding stuff. Needs to sound more like an adult female station again.
It has what I would call a signal deficiency. The 60 dbu covers about 80% of the market, but it has the issue of too little power in a reduction done to get better height. When stations have actual RF under perhaps 4 to 5 kw, you end up with a relatively weak signal over a broader area.Since when does KGGI have a signal problem in the Inland Empire?
Same coverage, greater fragmentation. And the big reason for the decline is the general ebb in listening for all CHRs, whether rhythmic, traditional or Churban. Some of that is due to the high percentage of hip hop songs that can't be played on the radio due to lyric content.This station used to grab a 4 share in the beauty pageant numbers effortlessly.
And KIIS itself is way off in listening. Seacreast's former sidekick is beating him quite amply, and overall KIIS is suffering the CHR lull that has affected nearly every market.Kind of surprising that KIIS-FM is beating KGGI as of late in Riverside, considering that KIIS-FM barely acknowledges listeners from the Inland Empire. Even KBIG is beating them, and KBIG isn't necessarily a rhythmic-leaning Hot AC like WKTU.
If I'm not mistaken, 20 years ago, Bob West was the actor wearing the Barney outfit!Westicals, that's who they need... Bob West! Station needs some vibe, remove the negatives....
We saw this same technical situation back in the 1970's when Gene Autry wanted to buy KUTE 102 (101.9). At the time KUTE was grandfathered in for years as a "Superpower Class B station" with 82 kW from Flint Peak at about 1180 ft HAAT. Coverage was at least as good or better that 98.7's signal from above Beverly Hills, but Mr Autry's condition of sale was that it be a Mt Wilson station. So an application was filed to move the station to Mt Wilson with equivalent power based on Wilson's 3000 ft HAAT. The app was rejected - the FCC said to operate from Mt Wilson power could be no more than standard class B max power which from Wilson would be about 640 Watts. Gene Autry paid 1 million dollars for the station anyway! Coverage was horrible as compared to the original 82 Kw. But down the road the FCC eventually changed their tune and let them increase power to about 5 kW. (Even though the 102.1 station in Oceanside freaked out, the FCC dismissed their objection.) It's interesting that KPCC the NPR station does so well in that they are the weakest signal on Mt Wilson with only 600 Watts, but they do have a couple of booster stations.It has what I would call a signal deficiency. The 60 dbu covers about 80% of the market, but it has the issue of too little power in a reduction done to get better height. When stations have actual RF under perhaps 4 to 5 kw, you end up with a relatively weak signal over a broader area.
I've seen many of these... 600 watts on the ESB in NYC where just a mile from the site you could not hear it inside buildings. Or about 700 watts at a major foothill location in LA... almost no ratings but when moved to 6 kw at 100 meters in the community, oit started getting over a 2 share in the LA book.
KGGI was between a rock and a mountain place. Located lower the terrain was rough enough to obstruct in many populated areas and to overcome the terrain, they had to go "too" high.
Same coverage, greater fragmentation. And the big reason for the decline is the general ebb in listening for all CHRs, whether rhythmic, traditional or Churban. Some of that is due to the high percentage of hip hop songs that can't be played on the radio due to lyric content.
We saw this same technical situation back in the 1970's when Gene Autry wanted to buy KUTE 102 (101.9). At the time KUTE was grandfathered in for years as a "Superpower Class B station" with 82 kW from Flint Peak at about 1180 ft HAAT. Coverage was at least as good or better that 98.7's signal from above Beverly Hills, but Mr Autry's condition of sale was that it be a Mt Wilson station. So an application was filed to move the station to Mt Wilson with equivalent power based on Wilson's 3000 ft HAAT. The app was rejected - the FCC said to operate from Mt Wilson power could be no more than standard class B max power which from Wilson would be about 640 Watts. Gene Autry paid 1 million dollars for the station anyway! Coverage was horrible as compared to the original 82 Kw. But down the road the FCC eventually changed their tune and let them increase power to about 5 kW. (Even though the 102.1 station in Oceanside freaked out, the FCC dismissed their objection.) It's interesting that KPCC the NPR station does so well in that they are the weakest signal on Mt Wilson with only 600 Watts, but they do have a couple of booster stations.
In defense of Tomás, we’re all human. We all make mistakes.This mangled and inaccurate timeline bothered me so much that I requested reactivation of my account with Frank and David in order to post a correction to this and other such posts where the poster appears to have relied on their memory, rather than (as I do) using the resources of David's excellent World Radio History website to find accurate information in Broadcasting's tracking of FCC actions over the years.
Here is the actual history of 101.9, from its beginning to the point where Autry sold it:
March 22, 1952 (this appears to be the most accurate date, although there were other mentions of "1951" without a specific date): Signed on with 11.6kw from Flint Peak. Upgrade to 82kw, without transmitter site change, approved six years later and while I cannot find a specific date of that being implemented, I can prove it was in place by 1961, because that was the power listed in that year's Broadcasting Yearbook.
The original licensee, Robert P. Adams, moved KUTE to Mt. Wilson with 640w in 1969 ... long before Autry came into the picture. Adams sold to Tracy Broadcasting in 1972. Tracy sold it (along with KGFJ/1230, which had the KKTT calls at the time, briefly) in 1979 ... not to Autry, but to Inner City Broadcasting. Tracy had filed for an increase to 10kw, remaining on Wilson, which was still pending when Inner City took ownership; in 1985, the FCC finally rejected that application and Inner City filed for 2.36kw and that was rejected within a few months.
Autry bought KUTE in 1987 (long after "the 70s" claimed above) from Inner City and filed to move to the Verdugo Hills with 4.4kw, but then superceded that application with one to stay at Wilson with 2.36kw. That was approved in 1989 (by which time the calls had changed to KMPC-FM, then KEDG, and KLIT), and Autry only got that by somehow proving the increase was necessary to improve coverage over the Glendale city of license.
So Autry (a) did not buy the station when the OP "remembers" he did; (b) was not responsible for it moving to Wilson, so that was not a factor in his decision to buy it; and (c) any "horrible" signal compared to the original had been in place for almost 20 years before Autry.
It took two further attempts before he got 4.8kw at Wilson ... in 1996, before he sold out the following year.
Tomás, I would strongly suggest that you undertake a little research effort before trying to reconstruct a timeline from memory.
KMR, it has been a long time. Welcome back.This mangled and inaccurate timeline bothered me so much that I requested reactivation of my account with Frank and David in order to post a correction to this and other such posts where the poster appears to have relied on their memory, rather than (as I do) using the resources of David's excellent World Radio History website to find accurate information in Broadcasting's tracking of FCC actions over the years.
Here is the actual history of 101.9, from its beginning to the point where Autry sold it:
March 22, 1952 (this appears to be the most accurate date, although there were other mentions of "1951" without a specific date): Signed on with 11.6kw from Flint Peak. Upgrade to 82kw, without transmitter site change, approved six years later and while I cannot find a specific date of that being implemented, I can prove it was in place by 1961, because that was the power listed in that year's Broadcasting Yearbook.
The original licensee, Robert P. Adams, moved KUTE to Mt. Wilson with 640w in 1969 ... long before Autry came into the picture. Adams sold to Tracy Broadcasting in 1972. Tracy sold it (along with KGFJ/1230, which had the KKTT calls at the time, briefly) in 1979 ... not to Autry, but to Inner City Broadcasting. Tracy had filed for an increase to 10kw, remaining on Wilson, which was still pending when Inner City took ownership; in 1985, the FCC finally rejected that application and Inner City filed for 2.36kw and that was rejected within a few months.
Autry bought KUTE in 1987 (long after "the 70s" claimed above) from Inner City and filed to move to the Verdugo Hills with 4.4kw, but then superceded that application with one to stay at Wilson with 2.36kw. That was approved in 1989 (by which time the calls had changed to KMPC-FM, then KEDG, and KLIT), and Autry only got that by somehow proving the increase was necessary to improve coverage over the Glendale city of license.
So Autry (a) did not buy the station when the OP "remembers" he did; (b) was not responsible for it moving to Wilson, so that was not a factor in his decision to buy it; and (c) any "horrible" signal compared to the original had been in place for almost 20 years before Autry.
It took two further attempts before he got 4.8kw at Wilson ... in 1996, before he sold out the following year.
Tomás, I would strongly suggest that you undertake a little research effort before trying to reconstruct a timeline from memory.
Unfortunately, inaccurate information easily converts into "urban legend" and then "fact".KMR, it has been a long time. Welcome back.
But I would also defend Tomas. As has been explained before, this is a radio discussion site, not an authoritative source for radio history.