secondchoice said:
story@11 said:
Mornings are always their least performing daypart. That shift has to lead the day. Look at the number of folks they have run through that show. .
I know this will never happen. Would The Bull ever try Moby’s syndicated AM show? CC is already bring in out of town programming on WGST and the 105.7 AM show. I think Moby’s deal with 92.9 is over so there should be no conflict legally. Is Rhubarb working anywhere? Both have been successful and might be MOTIVATED to take on 101.5.
Pros, cons, and other comments here...
1) I would hope that Moby's noncompete with Z93 (yes, that's how long ago it was) is up by now. IIRC, they made him do traffic (and paid him handsomely to do so) for the duration instead of turning him loose.
2) If Bull picked up Moby, I am sure that WNGC and/or South 107 would either a) drop him or b) have something to say about it re: noncompetes. I don't know the terms of Moby's contract with either of those stations, though, or what their listening areas or markets re: a contract would consist of. Remember that South 107 is planning to up their power to 100K and take a lot more of the metro once 107.5 moves from Perimeter Center to their new stick in NorX. But CC could make it worth Moby's while. But CC probably won't do so, being CC.
3) Both Rhubarb and Moby have a reputation (not necessarily deserved) for being too cornpone. That's why Moby was dumped by Kicks. As proof that there isn't anything new under the sun, that's also why WPLO (590) succeeded in their flip from Top 40 to "Town & Country" back in the day.
4) Both Rhubarb and Moby would have instant name recognition...not necessarily a good thing in younger demos.
As an aside--and there was a good Stark article on this a few days back--is it nowadays too much to ask for a country station to try to please all country fans? Or does country need to segment, like AOR did, into classic, young/active, and mainstream formats? I don't understand why this hasn't happened more than it has--I can't see the middle-age female country AC types, the young male "rockin' country" types, the young female country pop types, and the older classic country types all getting along on one station.