redsfan1966 said:1460 aint changin anytime soon....this is a cheap way to program two frequencies and is becoming common place....plus apparently from some ads I heard today Indians games will become priority on 1460 during scheduling conflicts....and Columbus progressive fans---sorry, that train "left the station" and aint ever coming back....
Ohio radio man said:So, they just announced that they will be using the 1460 signal to broadcast all the tournament games while the FM continues to opperate the regular sports talk format. Will this begin the change over of 1460 to... whatever?
gabigley1 said:redsfan1966 said:1460 aint changin anytime soon....this is a cheap way to program two frequencies and is becoming common place....plus apparently from some ads I heard today Indians games will become priority on 1460 during scheduling conflicts....and Columbus progressive fans---sorry, that train "left the station" and aint ever coming back....
I can't name one AM/FM simulcast in the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton and Youngstown markets except for WHIO 1290 AM in Dayton.
gabigley1 said:A couple of months ago, Sean Gilbow and a few other "Progressive Talk" supporters out there sent a letter to the RadiOhio GM asking him to change the format of 1460 from Sports to "Progressive Talk". There is a build in audience and advertising base they told the GM of RadiOhio. Well, RadiOhio is not interested in
changing the formant to "Progressive Talk" even after reading all those letter on how great the "Progressive Talk" format would work on 1460.
Of course, when the economy improves, RadiOhio may then drop the simulcast of 97.1 but it dosn't look like it will be "Progressive Talk".
Nathan Obral said:this thread may be full of grousing and complaining about something that won't really change
Nathan Obral said:Oh, and what about the political culture of the Dispatch companies itself? Last I remember, the Dispatch was a moderate newspaper. Their ownership may not feel the need to affiliate themselves with a specific ideology and cause all sorts of headaches for themselves later on by putting liberal talk on 1460. In other words, they aren't General Electric. If that is the case, this thread may be full of grousing and complaining about something that won't really change.
willcail said:BTW WDEM stop broadcasting analog on 2.17.2009. The proper call letters are WDEM CD.
xmusicmatt said:willcail said:BTW WDEM stop broadcasting analog on 2.17.2009. The proper call letters are WDEM CD.
I have not recently rescanned but what RF channel is WDEM on?
If the Performance Tax gets signed into law, how many stations would survive on Talk alone? There's only so many forms of Talk radio in the first place. If radio DOES dump music and go all talk, my MP3 player and CD collection will be utilized to their full ability. Think an 8-9 share is low for first place now? An all-Talk Columbus would be lucky to do a 5 tops.OhioMediaWatch said:Oh, no, yet another "FM is only for music" thread!
Look, as someone else said about something else here, "that train has left the station". News, talk and sports formats are migrating to FM. Deal with it.
One good reason they are - music formats are declining on over-air radio due to stuff like, well, maybe you've heard of this "iPod" thing. Or "Slacker". Or even the still-alive satellite radio. A good reason to put news/talk/sports on FM in 2009 is that you can't listen to live programming on an iPod, and you can't get local, live programming on Slacker/etc.
And furthermore, if the Performance Tax manages to get out of Congress and onto the president's desk for a signature - I don't know if President Obama supports it or not - music formats will be dumped all over America's FM radio dial, in pretty large numbers.
I've had this discussion a few times (mostly with Nu_Roo), so I'm gonna try not to get into a rut here.
As far as what 1460 does, I think the idea stated above - turn it, eventually, into a network sister of the mostly local 97.1 - would work. And maybe Good Karma's WWGK up here would be a model for that. With very little local programming on 1460 in this scenario, it'd cost Dispatch/WBNS virtually nothing to run "Columbus' ESPN Radio 1460" with Cowherd, Van Pelt and the like, with overflow sports from 97.1 that they're already apparently doing.
Nu_Roo_2 said:The opinions being attributed to me here are missing key points that I thought I was hammering ad nauseum awhile ago.
Plainly stated, I agree that U.S. FM is bound to get more and more talk, and that much (not all) of it will work. But Columbus is a very atypical market for its size -- in BAD ways -- and has to be viewed a little differently: It makes less sense for booming FM signals to start switching to talk in a market that has SO FEW big FM signals for its size.It's even more nonsensical when you consider that in Columbus some of the biggest signals are hugging each other music-format wise even while there are mulltiple highly-viable mainstream options that remain untried by any of them. A prime example of this goofy (to put it mildly) situation is WLZT doing mainstream AC like SNY, instead of trying, say the incredibly successful Classic Hits format. Duplication among music formats on big sticks obviously makes no sense whatsoever when there are few of them and 97.1 has left music. In fact, as I have said before, 93.3 doing mainstream AC instead of Classic Hits makes even less sense than if it became the new home of TVN.
If I lived in Indy, or Cincy, or Clevely etc., I wouldn't care much at all if a talk station or two took over big signals (as some already have), because there are still so many big-signal music stations that cover the music gamut pretty well (re-emphasize: big-signal -- the rimshots are a joke). It's SOOO different than here, where the the motto is "less FM that you can hear, but with MORE duplication!" Again, a five-year-old could probably figure out that that's a nonsensical state of affairs.
So OhioMedia, please realize I am not a "talk doesn't belong on FM, dammit!" person. I am a "more talk would be especially disappointing on a big signal in Columbus vs. normal markets" person.
What Nu Roo is trying to say is in Columbus there are so few big sticks and so much format overlap. We have Q-FM and The Rock with similar formats, we have 'LZT and Sunny doing AC, but no big signal Classic Hits, Adult Hits, or Hot AC to speak of, but plenty of Rock and AC on the big sticks. As cheap as some station operators are in Columbus I am shocked that the cheaply-run Adult Hits hasn't been tried on at least one big stick, or even Classic Hits seeing as how well 'GRR does in Cincy.Rusty Blades said:Nu_Roo_2 said:The opinions being attributed to me here are missing key points that I thought I was hammering ad nauseum awhile ago.
Plainly stated, I agree that U.S. FM is bound to get more and more talk, and that much (not all) of it will work. But Columbus is a very atypical market for its size -- in BAD ways -- and has to be viewed a little differently: It makes less sense for booming FM signals to start switching to talk in a market that has SO FEW big FM signals for its size.It's even more nonsensical when you consider that in Columbus some of the biggest signals are hugging each other music-format wise even while there are mulltiple highly-viable mainstream options that remain untried by any of them. A prime example of this goofy (to put it mildly) situation is WLZT doing mainstream AC like SNY, instead of trying, say the incredibly successful Classic Hits format. Duplication among music formats on big sticks obviously makes no sense whatsoever when there are few of them and 97.1 has left music. In fact, as I have said before, 93.3 doing mainstream AC instead of Classic Hits makes even less sense than if it became the new home of TVN.
If I lived in Indy, or Cincy, or Clevely etc., I wouldn't care much at all if a talk station or two took over big signals (as some already have), because there are still so many big-signal music stations that cover the music gamut pretty well (re-emphasize: big-signal -- the rimshots are a joke). It's SOOO different than here, where the the motto is "less FM that you can hear, but with MORE duplication!" Again, a five-year-old could probably figure out that that's a nonsensical state of affairs.
So OhioMedia, please realize I am not a "talk doesn't belong on FM, dammit!" person. I am a "more talk would be especially disappointing on a big signal in Columbus vs. normal markets" person.
Sooo...just what are you trying to say?
alans613 said:What Nu Roo is trying to say is in Columbus there are so few big sticks and so much format overlap. We have Q-FM and The Rock with similar formats, we have 'LZT and Sunny doing AC, but no big signal Classic Hits, Adult Hits, or Hot AC to speak of, but plenty of Rock and AC on the big sticks. As cheap as some station operators are in Columbus I am shocked that the cheaply-run Adult Hits hasn't been tried on at least one big stick, or even Classic Hits seeing as how well 'GRR does in Cincy.Rusty Blades said:Nu_Roo_2 said:The opinions being attributed to me here are missing key points that I thought I was hammering ad nauseum awhile ago.
Plainly stated, I agree that U.S. FM is bound to get more and more talk, and that much (not all) of it will work. But Columbus is a very atypical market for its size -- in BAD ways -- and has to be viewed a little differently: It makes less sense for booming FM signals to start switching to talk in a market that has SO FEW big FM signals for its size.It's even more nonsensical when you consider that in Columbus some of the biggest signals are hugging each other music-format wise even while there are mulltiple highly-viable mainstream options that remain untried by any of them. A prime example of this goofy (to put it mildly) situation is WLZT doing mainstream AC like SNY, instead of trying, say the incredibly successful Classic Hits format. Duplication among music formats on big sticks obviously makes no sense whatsoever when there are few of them and 97.1 has left music. In fact, as I have said before, 93.3 doing mainstream AC instead of Classic Hits makes even less sense than if it became the new home of TVN.
If I lived in Indy, or Cincy, or Clevely etc., I wouldn't care much at all if a talk station or two took over big signals (as some already have), because there are still so many big-signal music stations that cover the music gamut pretty well (re-emphasize: big-signal -- the rimshots are a joke). It's SOOO different than here, where the the motto is "less FM that you can hear, but with MORE duplication!" Again, a five-year-old could probably figure out that that's a nonsensical state of affairs.
So OhioMedia, please realize I am not a "talk doesn't belong on FM, dammit!" person. I am a "more talk would be especially disappointing on a big signal in Columbus vs. normal markets" person.
Sooo...just what are you trying to say?