Looks like KONO wants to double down on their number one rated classic hit KONO FM. Lets see if they can do it. As far as billing goes their audience will be well over the 55 year old limit that advertisers shy away from.
Also keep in mind, their seems to be a bit more of a following for the traditional oldies format among markets that are similar in demographics, etc. I was in an unrated market that was similar and oldies were fairly well liked by a fairly decent percentage of mostly males starting at about 30 to 35 years old and up, leaning heavily Hispanic. There might be a nice combo buy there with the FM.
Absolutely right David. We're talking folks born in here and beyond as well as the Hispanic population that has been here all along. San Antonio is fairly unique. Their FM Tejano station does well.
What if KONO AM takes away listeners from KONO FM?
It will take me away. I like the 60's & 70's. Classic Hits, 70's & 80's, KONO 101.1 is kind of a misnomer for 101.1. They play some pretty obscure songs that really aren't what one might call an "Oh Wow" moment.
It will take me away. I like the 60's & 70's. Classic Hits, 70's & 80's, KONO 101.1 is kind of a misnomer for 101.1. They play some pretty obscure songs that really aren't what one might call an "Oh Wow" moment.
Let's Go All The Way by Sly Fox was a huge hit. Seems Casey Kasem talked about how it never made it when released, but KKBQ in Houston played it and it caught fire. Might be wrong, but I think it peaked inside the Top 10. .
Felt the same was about "You Take My Breath Away" from the 1970...was that Rex Smith?
About two months ago I was listening to classic hits 96.9 and they were bad mouthing KONO for not playing oldies anymore, so I'm glad that KONO at least in AM is back playing some classics. I honestly don't feel that 96.9 plays any good songs anyway, most of their music is really obscure 70's R&B or really obscure freestyle dance pop from the 80's.
They are working on streaming and an app, according to their Facebook page.
There's that word "obscure" again. I'm looking at playlist after playlist, hour after hour, and seeing 99 percent totally familiar songs that were national hits. I remember hearing all but one of them often on CHR stations back in the day. The one song I thought might be obscure turned out to be a national top 10 single that just didn't do much here in New England. "Obscure" to me would indicate a song that either got no radio or very little radio exposure when current. Unless San Antonio radio was ignoring big national singles routinely in the '70s and '80s, that station is not playing obscure music by any definition.