Gregg said:>>>It seems like nothing works in OKC but religious programming and classic rock. <<<
Well, I wouldn't say Catholic programming WORKS. I'm sure the station will be non-commercial and depend financially on the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa, as well as listener contributions. I don't think there'll be a sizable listenership to Catholic programming in Oklahoma City. The other FM stations in Oklahoma City programmed for Protestant listeners are also non-commercial.
And even though the market is losing one Classic Country station, it still has three 100,000 watt stations doing Country, mainstream KTST and KJKE, and Classic Country KXXY. That's still as many FM Country stations as you can hear in Nashville.
Gregg said:Well, I wouldn't say Catholic programming WORKS. I'm sure the station will be non-commercial and depend financially on the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa, as well as listener contributions. I don't think there'll be a sizable listenership to Catholic programming in Oklahoma City. The other FM stations in Oklahoma City programmed for Protestant listeners are also non-commercial.
bchristi said:Gregg said:>>>It seems like nothing works in OKC but religious programming and classic rock. <<<
Well, I wouldn't say Catholic programming WORKS. I'm sure the station will be non-commercial and depend financially on the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa, as well as listener contributions. I don't think there'll be a sizable listenership to Catholic programming in Oklahoma City. The other FM stations in Oklahoma City programmed for Protestant listeners are also non-commercial.
And even though the market is losing one Classic Country station, it still has three 100,000 watt stations doing Country, mainstream KTST and KJKE, and Classic Country KXXY. That's still as many FM Country stations as you can hear in Nashville.
KXXY is a great sounding Classic Country station in my opinion. It's the only station I listen to for country being that I can't stand today's country. I think two modern country stations and one classic is a good balance in a market where country is popular like OKC. This city has too many classic rock stations though by far and I think the herd should be thinned. 94.7 should go back to playing active rock and go after 100.5 the KATT. Rock isn't my specialty but I've heard their music is very ho-hum compared to the Edge in Tulsa. That brings me to my next point. Tulsa's radio stations are leaps and bounds beyond OKC's. I think a big part of that is I don't believe Cumulus has a huge presence in Tulsa.
A few of OKC's religious stations simulcast on multiple frequencies so it seems like there is more than there actually is.
bchristi said:94.7 should go back to playing active rock and go after 100.5 the KATT. Rock isn't my specialty but I've heard their music is very ho-hum compared to the Edge in Tulsa. That brings me to my next point. Tulsa's radio stations are leaps and bounds beyond OKC's. I think a big part of that is I don't believe Cumulus has a huge presence in Tulsa.
J.L. said:bchristi said:Gregg said:>>>It seems like nothing works in OKC but religious programming and classic rock. <<<
Well, I wouldn't say Catholic programming WORKS. I'm sure the station will be non-commercial and depend financially on the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa, as well as listener contributions. I don't think there'll be a sizable listenership to Catholic programming in Oklahoma City. The other FM stations in Oklahoma City programmed for Protestant listeners are also non-commercial.
And even though the market is losing one Classic Country station, it still has three 100,000 watt stations doing Country, mainstream KTST and KJKE, and Classic Country KXXY. That's still as many FM Country stations as you can hear in Nashville.
KXXY is a great sounding Classic Country station in my opinion. It's the only station I listen to for country being that I can't stand today's country. I think two modern country stations and one classic is a good balance in a market where country is popular like OKC. This city has too many classic rock stations though by far and I think the herd should be thinned. 94.7 should go back to playing active rock and go after 100.5 the KATT. Rock isn't my specialty but I've heard their music is very ho-hum compared to the Edge in Tulsa. That brings me to my next point. Tulsa's radio stations are leaps and bounds beyond OKC's. I think a big part of that is I don't believe Cumulus has a huge presence in Tulsa.
A few of OKC's religious stations simulcast on multiple frequencies so it seems like there is more than there actually is.
I love KXY because I too like Classic Country. I think 94.7 should flip to alternative because OKC could use a full time alternative rock station and 96.9 should flip to Jack FM.
Kent said:You know, it's funny, but I've always thought that, while Tulsa was a more complete market because it had more signals, OKC usually had better quality radio when compared format-to-format.
I'd much rather have KXXY over KXBL.
KOMA has always been better than anything Tulsa has had to offer, whether it was KQLL or KTSO.
KATT puts KMOD to shame. While I think Star 103.3's flip to "Rock 103.3" has been a huge improvement, I'd still rather have KRXO.
I'd prefer KMGL over KRAV (except at night), though I have to admit I'd have KRAV over KYIS!
There are, however, two areas I'd definitely agree with you on: contemporary country and CHR/Top-40. KWEN and KVOO are ten times better than KTST and Jake, and Tulsa's Twister is every bit as good. I'd also have KTBT and KHTT over KJYO and KKWD, though that hasn't always been the case!