> > WLGZ has the potential of increasing its audience if it
> > bothered to spend money, as you pointed out, on more local
>
> > talent plus having local news during morning and afternoon
>
> > drive. After all the audience the station is going after
> > tends to be more interested in news and information than
> > younger demographics.
>
> Most of the older listeners to this station were probably
> refugees from WEZ0's beautiful music days. The slightly
> younger side of the demo probably stayed with the WARM-101
> operation, although people I knew also jumped to WBEE's
> country. But the 60+ set seems to be reduced to the erudite
> WXXI-FM, WLGZ, or WHAM (the angry white guy talk).
>
> I was surprised to see a lot of older folks becoming XM
> aware and finding their beautiful music channel Sunny
> playing in their Buicks and Cadillacs.

That's the only
> place left you're going to hear Paul Mauriat coming out of
> someone's car.
>
> Crawford's treatment of WLGZ seemed to be an improvement
> over the older satellite delivered AM standards format, but
> I haven't really listened much to it lately.
>
> > Personally I would love to see a few local individuals
> come
> > in and buy 990-AM and invest the time and money it would
> > take to make the station into what I know it can be…real
> > professional radio.
>
> This cuts across the grain of what radio looks like these
> days. I wouldn't be surprised to see some digital radio
> stations running subchannel versions of "the lost formats of
> Rochester" on a purely automated basis. A fully staffed and
> invested standards format station seems unlikely around
> here, unless we get some regulation back that requires
> actual programming for, from, and about the city of license.
>
I think scooterodell is right about WLGZ being locally hosted 24/7 at least during M-F. I've seen local hosts at events and such. In my opinion, that is fully staffed. I also believe that their programming does originate locally. There are other Standards stations in the company but I'm pretty sure each is operated/programmed individually.