ARE STATION WAS LIKE PULSE 87.7 YOU CAN ONLY GET IT IN DEFFERENT AREAS OF LAS VEGAS BUT NOW THEY BOOST THE SIGNAL IT COMES IN VERRY CLEAR ALL OVER LAS VEGAS AREA AND UTAH AND ARIZONA. http://www.vibevegas.com/home/
d21ofnj said:I've listened to Vibe since day one, it's awesome the signal got boosted and is hitting the hot spots of Las Vegas. I did ask people in the St. George area if Vibe is also coming in crystal clear.
I thought you only bashed New York City dance stations. And yes, it is heard on I-15 even north of Cedar City, Utah, all the way down to a few miles into California. This is the dance station with the 2nd largest signal, only behind Sirius XM BPM.DavidEduardo said:d21ofnj said:I've listened to Vibe since day one, it's awesome the signal got boosted and is hitting the hot spots of Las Vegas. I did ask people in the St. George area if Vibe is also coming in crystal clear.
They put a 340 watt booster on to the NE of the Strip; it does not get a 64 dbu signal beyond Nellis AFB into the urban area of the market. Many decades of study have shown that 95% of all reported in home and at work listening takes placle inside the 64 dbu signal.
Whether it is heard in St george or not matters little; St. George is not in the Las Vegas MSA and has no bearing on this station's success.
Nick said:I thought you only bashed New York City dance stations.
And yes, it is heard on I-15 even north of Cedar City, Utah, all the way down to a few miles into California.
This is the dance station with the 2nd largest signal, only behind Sirius XM BPM.
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, there are more cactus than people in the 64 dBu contour of 94.5 The Vibe.
DavidEduardo said:Yet Party has the biggest chance of any in succeeding as the expense structure and format have a greater liklihood of working, although only as a very narrow appeal station.
DavidEduardo said:I have no need to bash any stations in that format in the US; most bash themselves with no help from me. Yet Party has the biggest chance of any in succeeding as the expense structure and format have a greater liklihood of working, although only as a very narrow appeal station.
wgliradio said:DavidEduardo said:Yet Party has the biggest chance of any in succeeding as the expense structure and format have a greater liklihood of working, although only as a very narrow appeal station.
I would be so sure. The parties involved in JVC have been known to turn wine into water. John and Morey sunk all the gains from the WLIR sale into print media (and bad print media at that).
DavidEduardo said:Nick said:I thought you only bashed New York City dance stations.
I have no need to bash any stations in that format in the US; most bash themselves with no help from me.
DavidEduardo said:ChannelFlipper said:e-dawg said:How about switch to a dance music format and call it Energy 92.7 FM?
You know, that is a great idea! In fact, I think no matter what station we are discussing, dance would be a suitable replacement for any format flip. With the track record of the format in this market, what could go wrong?
Yeah, I agree. Like, totally.
And the reference to the 92.7 Energy in Chicago that bled money for several years is really nifty.
Hey, where's that girl Buffy? There is a vampire that refuses to die that needs to be staked.
Nick said:I thought you only bashed New York City dance stations. And yes, it is heard on I-15 even north of Cedar City, Utah, all the way down to a few miles into California. This is the dance station with the 2nd largest signal, only behind Sirius XM BPM.DavidEduardo said:d21ofnj said:I've listened to Vibe since day one, it's awesome the signal got boosted and is hitting the hot spots of Las Vegas. I did ask people in the St. George area if Vibe is also coming in crystal clear.
They put a 340 watt booster on to the NE of the Strip; it does not get a 64 dbu signal beyond Nellis AFB into the urban area of the market. Many decades of study have shown that 95% of all reported in home and at work listening takes placle inside the 64 dbu signal.
Whether it is heard in St george or not matters little; St. George is not in the Las Vegas MSA and has no bearing on this station's success.
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, there are more cactus than people in the 64 dBu contour of 94.5 The Vibe.
CHRles said:I've always been disappointed with stations like Vibe in Vegas and the former Energy Arizona due to their signals. Why bother launching a format such as Dance, which is a hard sell to begin with and its primary audience lives within major urban areas.
St. George is a well known ass a great retirement community not as a haven for Dance radio.
d21ofnj said:How biased of a statement is that comparing vampires to dance stations?!
You're basically saying that dance stations needs to be killed off the dial.
What's up with that?!?! How about all the other formats that TRULY need to get off the air but are not, but ONLY dance formats need to be killed?!?!
Well, guess what, if dance music stations are like vampires and refuse to die, GUILTY AS CHARGED! We won't EVER DIE, and you are just gonna have to deal with it!
d21ofnj said:It was just a question, since the coverage map shows it hits St. George, UT, part of arizona, and Nevada. Just wondering if anyone from St. George is listening to Vibe, that's all.
DavidEduardo said:The comparison is broader than that... any station or format that is not performing needs to be "staked" in these hard times. With the PPM, we know with greater certainty and much greater speed whether something is not working... and just as the TV operators know that a show is not working in its first or second showing, radio can now make that kind of rapid decision.
DavidEduardo said:Not the station, the fomat... whatever the format is... if it is not performing.
DavidEduardo said:Of course, I did not say that. In the context of dance, I am saying that a format that does not achieve results needs to be changed or refocused. For example, the change in focus and expense structure of Party (vs. Pulse) may make the format / facility viable on a very limited scale. In this case, changing costs and expectations may turn out to be the answer. Or not.
DavidEduardo said:Why would any owner keep a non-performing format instead of something with greater potential?
d21ofnj said:WQXR tremenesly dropped and we know what that issue is, so because of their low numbers I guess they should be "staked" too.
So what gives to the formats that are completely duplicated as in 5 CHR's and 4 classic rock stations score so high when they are all the same?
It's just funny that every response you say of a format failing is strictly on dance. When othr formats flip, like country, alternative, jazz, hot talk, modern rock, it's a different story.
Why would any owner keep a non-performing format instead of something with greater potential?
Then why are you keeping La Que Buena?
DavidEduardo said:WQXR was "staked" when the NYT sold it. It's revenues, like nearly all commercial classical stations, had virtually evaporated, and the station was worth more to the Times dead than alive. The format moved, as a non-commercial station, to 105.9. Non-comms often exist to present formats that can't be commercially successful. On this one, you are veritably hoist on your own petard.
DavidEduardo said:There are two true CHRs in NY. And each has a different approach, one with more personality and a more extensive library, while the other is music intensive with amazingly fast rotations. The three others I imagine are statinons that partisans of each would not confuse (whatever they are) and folks in the industry would consider totally separate formats.
DavidEduardo said:No format has had so many failures and an almost total lack of success as dance in the last decade. In fact, Party on Long Island is about the only real success story.... it now beats legendary WLNG in billing, in fact. And my point about the former Pulse is that the Party management may pull it off based on a better cost structure and lowered expectations.
DavidEduardo said:Performance is based on revenue. Que Buena is the only station directly serving the million or so Mexican group in New York. There are ad buys specifically for the group, and the cume indicates a significant delivery of it.
While there is no market for a 1-share station in general market, there is for the Hispanic market, where a 1 share in general market is a 10 to 12 share among Spanish dominant Hispanics.