S
SALESGUY2000
Guest
The last great music station on AM was KOOL Gold 960 AM.
SALESGUY2000 said:The last great music station on AM was KOOL Gold 960 AM.
DavidEduardo said:Other than the marginal 550 and 620 night signals...
SALESGUY2000 said:The last great music station on AM was KOOL Gold 960 AM.
oldiesfan6479 said:When did a low-end 1 kw ND and 5 kw DA become marginal signals?
You've always talked them up as the only two full-market AM signals,
day or night, in PHX.
Don't you have to be in the far fringes of the metro--or perhaps even beyond--
to have 55/FYI falling off or be impacted by either of KT'R's nulls?
Your inability to get Sports Parking Lot 620 in Prescott doesn't count. ;D
DavidEduardo said:landtuna said:Long playlists (are better than short ones for us "olde fartes")
Local is always better than "good" (disagree, explanation below)
AM will get younger listeners if programmers are creative. (AM is dead except for Mexican and hate radio)
I've amended some of your statements to reflect some of mine. But personally have never said any of them.
I'm looking at my personal preferences only and not from a business perspective. While I am not necessarily for or against remotely produced shows on radio I will almost always choose the local variety so long as the content is not significantly less. For instance, I am assuming there are a few AM drive shows "better" than the KOOL Morning Show but I continue to listen to KOOL because I have developed a relationship (albeit receive-only) with the characters. It might happen remotely were I to try but for now I am satisfied with the local show. Just as I support the local business owners in my area with my dollars I do the same with local talent and for the same reasons.
The fact is that there are no ratings-based conclusions that can really be made as to local vs. nonlocal as a determining quality in a morning (or other daypart) show. The conclusions that can be made have to do with the entertainment value of programming. "Local" does not give a bad show and instant pass to higher ratings. And not being local is not a yellow card comparitively.
You say AM is only good for "Mexican and hate radio". First, "Mexican" stations are in Mexico. And if you mean "Spanish language stations" please name me one well rated Spanish langauge AM in a top 100 market in the Southwest. Hispanics, much younger than non-Hispanic whites as a group, don't use AM just like under-45's who are not Hispanic don't use AM.
And talk radio is not "hate radio." It's entertainment, like Leno and Oprah and the cable news and talk networks. But it does not work very well on AM, either, in the sales demographics.
Again, long playlists fail when a station with a shorter list is an option. I have never seen a station win by playing more songs than a direct competitor. The average listener wants to hear many of their favorite songs each time they turn on the radio.
AZJoe said:The average listener wants to hear many of their favorite songs each time they turn on the radio.
Actually that statement is not true. In the 90s KPSN 96.9 (Sunny 97) flipped to oldies and boasted of playing more oldies than KOOL, with a larger, deeper playlist. They beat KOOL at their own game, overtaking them for some time in the oldies ratings.
DavidEduardo said:I really doubt this case had to do with the list; in the early to mid 90's KOOL was playing odder and deeper song, but the whole station was strange. It went through the Todd Wallace period, and was likely vulnerable on any number of counts.
oldiesfan6479 said:I'm not sure if you're equating the Todd Wallace period with the 1990s,
but it was circa 2004-2005, from what I can see from older posts that
had him leaving the building in spring 2005--a long time from when KOOL
had format competition from KPSN.
DavidEduardo said:oldiesfan6479 said:I meant that after a long period of weakness, the whole episode ended with the Wallace period. I can recall listening a number of different times in the 1992 to 1995 period, and thinking that the station must have lost its way.
Nurse Jeff and I've listened to KOOL for over 20 years and can recall it's moments of glory, as well as it's valleys of self destruction. Doesn't matter if it was Chauncey, Adams or the current owners, KOOL always seems to bounce back and regain it's title as one of the Valley's best radio station. But the landscape is rapidly changing and KOOL (as well as all other terrestrial stations) will find the going tougher as the years go by. Thanks to Bruce Kelley, our '76 Gremlin is equipped with XM Radio and we're locked on 60's on Six as well as the 70's channel. No need to even punch up 94~Five anymore. With iPods, WIFI, MP3s and soon Al Gore's invention in some Chrysler cars, the alternatives to KOOL, and most over the air stations, are beyond comprehension.
Lloyd Palmer said:But what about the obvious problem with the PK files airing during the overnights?
oldiesfan6479 said:When you find out that Tom Kent has put yet another
CBS classic hits station evening jock on the beach.