mike1985 said:CTListener said:mike1985 said:It was announced Q 101 in Chicago will stay on 101.1 through Monday than programming will shift to 97.9 HD2. I think it's probably safe to assume 101.9 here in NYC will stay Rock through the weekend as well and start their stunting Monday as well.
HD receivers have nearly disappeared from shelves as manufacturers stop producing them. Why would Q101 even bother putting the old format on an HD2 when any listeners who might want to follow it there will have a hard time even finding a radio?
I think it's their lame attempt at being able to say "Well Q101 still exists in some form." Q101 will also be streaming online along with 101.9 WRXP. But both will just be an automated Juke box with no personality. Might as well just throw your Ipod on shuffle in my opinion.
Major Correction: Q101 is NOT continuing on 97.9-HD2.
Emmis sold off WKQX's "Q101" brand, their intellectual property, their history and their website - due to Merlin not wishing to retain any of it - all off to Broadcast Barter Radio Networks a few days ago. "Q101" will be revived as a commercial-free internet station in the coming weeks.
As of early this morning www.q101.com was telling listeners that the station will live on at 97.9 HD-2. Not sure how that will work because according to the "Save The Loopers" Q101 will only be an Internet station. According to Emmis, they paid a fee and now own the "Q" brand. Perhaps the music will live on but the station will have to be called something else.
Therefore, 97.9-HD2 is not an actual continuation of "Q101." Sure, it may copy the format, but it will likely be a side branding from WLUP itself, and will have no local hosts or musical input. I'd presume that the online "Q101" would eventually have both when they get up on their feet (Emmis rocker KROX/Austin will feed their playlist onto the former WKQX stream starting on Monday).
So buying an HD Radio receiver is pretty much unnecessary, especially because both services will stream online.