For that last 36 hours, a narrow band of lake effect snow has slammed Buffalo's Southtowns. We're in the Fall book. As a former news-talk programmer, on-air music format person and now observer (and to some extent, critic) I've always been interested and intrigued by the effect "bad" weather has had on the ratings, especially in the Fall book which spans October, November and December.
Many of us recall the Blizzard of 77 when WKBW and Dan Neaverth stole WBEN's thunder. There have been subsequent weather events, the blizzard of '85 (although not as overwhelming as '77), the power outage of '05 and the October Surprise in 2008. Now we have the Lake Effect Storm of 2010. Admittedly, this eight mile wide, 30 mile long band of intense snow covered only a narrow swath of communities to the immediate south and east of Buffalo. But it brought the New York State Thruway to a dead stop between two of the busiest exchanges and stranded hundreds of cars and trucks for 12 to 18 hours and it made several national TV network news broadcasts.
News-talk stations seize these opportunities and the result of the ratings usually indicate massive cume and quarter hours. WBEN was all over it. WBFO and WNED-AM gave the event top billing. Although I wasn't glued to the radio (spending much of my time clearing the driveways of family and neighbors), I must admit to spending more time listening to WBEN today than I have in the last two weeks. Bauerle and Beach were on top of their games. To be truthful, the callers and their predicaments often were "the stars of the show." I sampled less of my favorite programs on WBFO and WNED, but found myself drawn to the drama being played out on 930.
This also was a good story for local TV news, although the pictures weren't as good as some might have hoped. NITEC cameras tend to get fuzzy and coated when snow flies.There also were the FM stations that maintained format, some voice tracked in various dayparts, some voice tracked from out of town; two FMs playing the Christmas hits "back to back and all in a row."
This board thrives on speculation and opinion, so the question is, who wins the diary war in the last 36-48 hours and how much of an impact will it present? Will WBEN score big numbers? Will people at work prefer to hear the hits with minimal talk, All Christmas or otherwise? Will there be a curiosity factor that drives listeners in unaffected areas around Buffalo to listen to the stations that feature the voices of people stuck on the Thruway and those who spent hours clearing their driveways and getting to work?
To be objective, this storm affected only a limited geographic area and handful of communities in Buffalo's Southtowns; Orchard Park, Hamburg, West Seneca, Elma, Depew, Lackawanna and Lakeview, but those communities deliver quite a number of in-tab diaries and thousands of commuters from other communities were stranded by this storm. The Northtowns went unscathed. We won't know how this weather event impacts ratings until around the third week of January, but it's always interesting to read the opinions of the pundits and prophets here.
Your thoughts?
Many of us recall the Blizzard of 77 when WKBW and Dan Neaverth stole WBEN's thunder. There have been subsequent weather events, the blizzard of '85 (although not as overwhelming as '77), the power outage of '05 and the October Surprise in 2008. Now we have the Lake Effect Storm of 2010. Admittedly, this eight mile wide, 30 mile long band of intense snow covered only a narrow swath of communities to the immediate south and east of Buffalo. But it brought the New York State Thruway to a dead stop between two of the busiest exchanges and stranded hundreds of cars and trucks for 12 to 18 hours and it made several national TV network news broadcasts.
News-talk stations seize these opportunities and the result of the ratings usually indicate massive cume and quarter hours. WBEN was all over it. WBFO and WNED-AM gave the event top billing. Although I wasn't glued to the radio (spending much of my time clearing the driveways of family and neighbors), I must admit to spending more time listening to WBEN today than I have in the last two weeks. Bauerle and Beach were on top of their games. To be truthful, the callers and their predicaments often were "the stars of the show." I sampled less of my favorite programs on WBFO and WNED, but found myself drawn to the drama being played out on 930.
This also was a good story for local TV news, although the pictures weren't as good as some might have hoped. NITEC cameras tend to get fuzzy and coated when snow flies.There also were the FM stations that maintained format, some voice tracked in various dayparts, some voice tracked from out of town; two FMs playing the Christmas hits "back to back and all in a row."
This board thrives on speculation and opinion, so the question is, who wins the diary war in the last 36-48 hours and how much of an impact will it present? Will WBEN score big numbers? Will people at work prefer to hear the hits with minimal talk, All Christmas or otherwise? Will there be a curiosity factor that drives listeners in unaffected areas around Buffalo to listen to the stations that feature the voices of people stuck on the Thruway and those who spent hours clearing their driveways and getting to work?
To be objective, this storm affected only a limited geographic area and handful of communities in Buffalo's Southtowns; Orchard Park, Hamburg, West Seneca, Elma, Depew, Lackawanna and Lakeview, but those communities deliver quite a number of in-tab diaries and thousands of commuters from other communities were stranded by this storm. The Northtowns went unscathed. We won't know how this weather event impacts ratings until around the third week of January, but it's always interesting to read the opinions of the pundits and prophets here.
Your thoughts?