Probably. Just look at WINS and KNX. It would be wise to move it to FM.. But it looks like 'BAP beat them to the punch.Would KRLD AM eventually move its programming to FM?
That's what blocking WBZ's move in Boston. What happens when the geezers die off and no one is listening to AM anymore?The problem is they don't own a dog FM that they could blow up for an older skewing format.
KMVK (107.5) is the obvious choice, but our good friend David will have sound reasons and demographics as to why that won't happen.Now which station would Audacy blow up to bring a FM Simulcast of KRLD?
Isn't WBZ still a good enough performer with a signal better than any other AM in town?That's what blocking WBZ's move in Boston. What happens when the geezers die off and no one is listening to AM anymore?
That's what blocking WBZ's move in Boston. What happens when the geezers die off and no one is listening to AM anymore?
I'd have to think that, given the station's substantial overhead and legacy in the market, management is deeply attuned to whenever to pull the switch and move 1030 WBZ to FM. Until then, just ride out the wave on AM as much as you can.
Outside of the few standalone FM talkers left like WRNO and WTKK, the only AM/FM simulcast I can think of in the iHeart stable is WERC AM/FM in Birmingham, and that wasn't a continuous simulcast (the AM originated a translator-fed rock format as WVVB for a few months in 2011).What I've seen is that iHeart is very reluctant to do the FM simulcast thing. They have several AMs with FM translators around the country, including KOA in Denver and WLW Cincinnati. When they moved KJR Seattle to FM, they put a satellite sports format on the AM. I may be missing a full simulcast somewhere, but I don't see one.
All-news and talk radio are not a linear comparison. All-news stations, especially the Audacy group, are deeply labor intensive and have been in the format largely since the 1960s, and they have varying degrees of need/demand to be on FM. I'm trying to think of a large-market Audacy AM talker that has a full-power FM simulcast.On the other hand, there are several examples of Audacy doing simulcasts, in NY, LA, CHI, and more. They would rather do the simulcast than spend money on a distinct format on FM. So it's possible, except they may be making good money with KMVK.
All-news and talk radio are not a linear comparison.
I could see a small argument to say Audacy could eye 98.7 or 100.3 for a KRLD Simulcast given the format overlap.
Both CBS Radio and Entercom, even pre-merger, were very pro-spoken word on FM. Hubbard and Bonneville are (were) as well. iHeart and Cumulus have been much more reluctant to simulcast anything (sports excluded for especially Cumulus in some cases) on FM other than translators. I think in this case, Cumulus has a decent signal with 93.3 but they can’t seem to find success with it, at least what they have tried or believe would work. So at this point there likely isn’t much of a revenue stream being cut off, and it may keep WBAP from losing as many listeners as AM continues to decline.What I've seen is that iHeart is very reluctant to do the FM simulcast thing. They have several AMs with FM translators around the country, including KOA in Denver and WLW Cincinnati. When they moved KJR Seattle to FM, they put a satellite sports format on the AM. I may be missing a full simulcast somewhere, but I don't see one.
On the other hand, there are several examples of Audacy doing simulcasts, in NY, LA, CHI, and more. They would rather do the simulcast than spend money on a distinct format on FM. So it's possible, except they may be making good money with KMVK.
Absolutely. The reasoning for that is that a lot of cluster sales are "packages" or combo sales of multiple stations with one rate for 2, 3, 4 or more stations sold in one buy. It's hard for an advertiser not to like doing just one or two buys that cover big pieces of a single market.KMVK is the odd duck out in the cluster being the only non-english station on the roster. However, KMVK in its current state does allow Audacy to tap the Hispanic market which has advertiser dollars that would be otherwise unavailable. There's a lot of leverage with that one station. The question is, is that enough to keep it going?
Audacy seems to be keeping KSPF in the 70s and primarily 80s, unlike KRTH which isn’t afraid of the 90s and is one of the most “aggressive” classic hits stations they own with playing newer hits, and it seems to overlap even more with KCBS than KSPF/KJKK. So who knows.Audacy LA has both KRTH Classic Hits and KCBS Adult Hits
I’m sure they’ve looked at KRLD and the Dallas cluster.
1. The Spot starts adding a bunch of songs from Jack.
2. La Grande moves to 100.3, Jack listeners redirected to The Spot.
3. KRLD launches a simulcast on 107.5.