Any speculation of KKLA 99.5 ever going up for sale ?
I thought ministries paid KKLA to run their programming?I thought that KKLA was a non-comm. Can't prove that by the FCC data base.
Why would they sell it? It bills (except for the pandemic year) over $10 million a year on very limited expenses.Any speculation of KKLA 99.5 ever going up for sale ?
It is commercial. In any case, a non-com in the commercial part of the band can become commercial with an FCC procedure.I thought that KKLA was a non-comm. Can't prove that by the FCC data base.
The problem with talk radio in general is that most stations have very old listeners. A few heritage stations that have keep up with trends in their particular audience area and have added FM, such as KSL and WSB, have done well even in 25-54.Wonder how many years its been since KKLA has used its stereo generator? KKLA must make a lot of money because it seems to me that if it were my Salem station, I'd swap programming with AM 870 and move "The Answer" to FM 99.5 and move the religious programming to am 870 to "compete" with KBRT 740 and KFRN 1280. David might be able to clarify but as I understand it, across the country, generally speaking, mainstream talk radio is doing better on FM than traditional AM in many markets.
His point is the talk station could probably do much better on the strong 99.5 signal and the religious programming would be more at home on the AM band where the small, but dedicated and profitable audience would almost surely follow. I have wondered for a long time why they didn't do this a long time ago. Being the first conservative talk station on the FM band would defintely help them in the competitive talk landscape.The problem with talk radio in general is that most stations have very old listeners. A few heritage stations that have keep up with trends in their particular audience area and have added FM, such as KSL and WSB, have done well even in 25-54.
KFI, looking good in 6+, is not even close to top 10 in 25-54.
It depends on the station and a heritage, still strong station that adds FM will last quite a few more years. But secondary stations or ones that have no tradition of good ratings and a heritage seem not to succeed if FM is added.
Being the first conservative talk station on the FM band would defintely help them in the competitive talk landscape.
This is why i quipped about KKLA's stereo generator. They shut that off years ago because they rarely, if ever, play any music. Their programming consists of preachers/ministers, church services, religious-conservative talk shows, and on weekends non-stop infomercials. It just seems to me this programming would be better on AM. I'd move sister station KRLA's "the Answer" to 99.5 because if I'm not mistaken, KRLA 870s ratings have been higher than KABC which is usually in the toilet.The station is owned by Salem. If they thought they could make more money with talk, they'd do it. They make a lot more money with contemporary Christian music. So that's what they do.
I'd move sister station KRLA's "the Answer" to 99.5 because if I'm not mistaken, KRLA 870s ratings have been higher than KABC which is usually in the toilet.
FM mono is not AM mono. FM mono has a higher audio bandwidth (15 kHz, compared to 5 kHz or less on a typical AM receiver) and less interference.This is why i quipped about KKLA's stereo generator. They shut that off years ago because they rarely, if ever, play any music. Their programming consists of preachers/ministers, church services, religious-conservative talk shows, and on weekends non-stop infomercials. It just seems to me this programming would be better on AM. I'd move sister station KRLA's "the Answer" to 99.5 because if I'm not mistaken, KRLA 870s ratings have been higher than KABC which is usually in the toilet.
Their programming consists of preachers/ministers, church services, religious-conservative talk shows, and on weekends non-stop infomercials. It just seems to me this programming would be better on AM.
I'd run "The Fish" on the station. It's Salem's highly rated commercial Christian format. But barter religious makes a lot of money.
Any speculation of KKLA 99.5 ever going up for sale ?
It should be said that you're talking about frequency response, not bandwidth. You're correct that the maximum transmitted audio frequency for an FM station is 15 kHz, which was the same for AM stations until the adoption of the NRSC standards in the mid 1980s, when the highest transmitted audio frequency for AM radio was reduced to 10 kHz. This is still relatively high fidelity in a good receiver if the station in question is broadcasting wideband audio, the trouble with AM aside from man-made noise levels, is that many stations processors deliberately limit the audio to 5 kHz and use the maximum compression possible so that the station can transmit the loudest audio possible across human voice frequencies with no more than 5% THD which is the maximum distortion permitted on AM stations per the FCC rules.FM mono is not AM mono. FM mono has a higher audio bandwidth (15 kHz, compared to 5 kHz or less on a typical AM receiver) and less interference.