gar fla said::'(
Listening to KNVS was like listening to old time AM radio.
There aren't enough sports stations already?
gar fla said:There aren't enough sports stations already?
DavidEduardo said:gar fla said:There aren't enough sports stations already?
No. Sports stations rather regularly make money, while AM music stations... and 50's-60's oldies stations in general... tend to lose money.
DavidEduardo said:gar fla said:There aren't enough sports stations already?
No. Sports stations rather regularly make money, while AM music stations... and 50's-60's oldies stations in general... tend to lose money.
MarioMania said:Why did it flip??
MarioMania said:Why did it flip??
rbrucecarter5 said:No. Sports stations rather regularly make money, while AM music stations... and 50's-60's oldies stations in general... tend to lose money.
Try telling that to KMVL Madisonville or KHVL Huntsville - both are locally owned and doing quite well. KHVL is doing so well with oldies, they bought an FM a few months back. Too bad the frequency isn't good for Houston or they would capture the oldies listeners in Houston, and maybe rate in the top ten like KLUV and KONO in their markets. Oldies is a viable format, and in demand. All it takes is somebody who understands the format, does it right to gain the ratings.
DavidEduardo said:"Oldies" stations (as the industry defines them, meaning a 60's core) don't do well in rated markets as they have nearly no listeners under 55 or so. While in some cases in rated markets where there is an oldies station that gets good 12+ numbers, the 25-54 sales demos are more barren than Death Valley.
rbrucecarter5 said:Well - oldies / classic hits, which is what KVNS was, rates
#5 in Dallas
#7 DC
#4 Philly
#11 Denver
#6 St Louis
#3 Portland OR
#2 Pittsburgh
#13 Seattle
#4 Phoenix
#6 Minneapolis
#10 San Diego
#2 Tampa
#3 Long Island
I could keep going through the ratings from Radio-info.com, but I think the point is made. Oldies/ classic hits is viable in just about any market, obviously a lot of people younger than 55 are listening, and even if they aren't those numbers make advertising on the station very attractive.