Holy smokes. What kind of music do they play?25 stations
Holy smokes. What kind of music do they play?25 stations
Holy smokes. What kind of music do they play?
Please cite the cable system in question. This feels a lot like fantasy posting, which we do not allow on this site.They're acting as translators
88.7 WERN - 88.3 FM Cable Radio (WPR)
89.9 WORT - 91.5 FM Cable Radio (Community)
91.7 WSUM - 91.9 FM Cable Radio (College)
92.1 WXXM - 92.7 FM Cable Radio (Oldies)
93.1 WJQM - 93.5 FM Cable Radio (Hop Hop)
94.1 WJJO - 94.5 FM Cable Radio (Hard Rock)
94.5 W223CN - 94.9 FM Cable Radio (Regional Spanish)
94.9 WOLX - 95.3 FM Cable Radio (Classic Hits)
95.5 FM WWMV-LP - 95.5 FM Cable Radio (LP FM)
96.7 FM W24RDR - 96.9 FM Cable Radio (Sports)
97.7 FM W249DH - 97.7 FM Cable Radio (Country)
98.1 FM WMGN - 98.1 FM Cable Radio (Adult Contemporary)
100.5 FM WTLX - 100.5 FM Cable Radio (Sports)
100.7 FM WKKD - (K-Love) (Cable Radio Only)
100.7 FM WKKD-HD2 (K-Love 2000s) (Cable Radio Only)
100.7 FM WKLD-HD3 (K-Love 2010s) (Cable Radio Only)
100.7 FM WKKD-HD4 (Air 1) (Cable Radio Only)
101.5 FM WIBA-HD1 - 101.5 FM (Cable Radio)(Classic Hits)
101.5 FM WIBA-HD2 - 101.5 FM-HD2 Cable Radio (The U) (Golden Oldies)
104.1 FM WZEE - 104.5 FM Cable Radio (Top 40)
104.5 FM WSLD - 104.7 FM Cable Radio (Country)
104.9 FM - Life 102.5 FM (Christian)
I always thought "Cable FM" made no sense since at least 90% (maybe more) of home FM listeners can receive adequate reception of local stations on most radios.
I agree with you.Transitioning to digital is the worst thing that happened to OTA TV.
Thanks for the info!It depends on the time and the circumstances.
For part of 1984, I lived in Beacon, New York. Colony Cablevision carried the NYC TV stations as well as its FM stations up to 104.3. The reason was simple: Mount Beacon blocked TV and FM reception from New York City. Colony put its reception antennas up on Mount Beacon to get around the problem.
Why did the FM service stop at 104.3? First, because there was a local station at 104.7, which I happened to work for. Second, the range above 104.7 was where stereo audio for pay-TV services was placed, along with various control tones. Before in-channel TV stereo broadcasting came into use, many cable systems would use one or more FM channels to provide stereo audio for pay-TV services.
Earlier, in rural areas which had few if any FM stations, an FM service made it possible to receive broadcasts from larger cities. In Missouri, the CARS-band relay system that crossed the state not only relayed TV stations from Kansas City and St. Louis, it also relayed two Kansas City FM stations, KCMO-FM/KFMU/KCEZ, then easy listening, and KXTR, classical.
So cable FM was far more useful than people in big cities might have thought.
Please cite the cable system in question. This feels a lot like fantasy posting, which we do not allow on this site.
There were a handful of markets where either flat terrain (allowing better OTA reception) or demographics resulted in OTA having relatively high percentages of the audience using OTA only. TVB used to provide those percentages, but unfortunately, I can't find a national percentage for when it bottomed out in the early 2010s. From memory, I want to say that it was down to about 10%, though.That is not quite true. A large group of minority households, particularly Hispanic, did not have cable or satellite.
Much of the reason for not having paid services was the cost. But for Spanish dominant or Spanish dependent Hispanics, it was also the fact that there was very little Spanish language content to be gained by subscribing to paid services. So OTA was more than adequate.
The internal figure I had in the year 2000 was that about 24% to 30% of households still used OTA only.
| DMA Rank | DMA Name | % OTA | % Wired Cable | % ADS |
112 | Boise | 26.9 | 24.9 | 48.9 |
202 | Fairbanks | 26.8 | 46.2 | 27 |
87 | Harlingen-Wslco-Brnsvl-McA | 25.6 | 44.1 | 31.4 |
91 | El Paso (Las Cruces) | 21.4 | 45.7 | 33.7 |
34 | Milwaukee | 21.4 | 59.2 | 19.9 |
109 | Ft. Wayne | 19.6 | 42.4 | 38.5 |
45 | Albuquerque-Santa Fe | 19.2 | 34.2 | 47 |
160 | Idaho Fals-Pocatllo(Jcksn) | 18.8 | 33.3 | 48.5 |
10 | Houston | 18.3 | 53.6 | 28.7 |
15 | Minneapolis-St. Paul | 18 | 52.9 | 29.3 |
197 | San Angelo | 4.3 | 56.6 | 40.5 |
145 | Palm Springs | 4 | 72.4 | 25 |
38 | West Palm Beach-Ft. Pierce | 3.9 | 73.7 | 24 |
1 | New York | 3.8 | 85.2 | 12.4 |
8 | Washington, DC (Hagrstwn) | 3.7 | 75.1 | 22 |
102 | Johnstown-Altoona-St Colge | 3.6 | 55.1 | 42.1 |
170 | Clarksburg-Weston | 3.5 | 52.5 | 44.8 |
30 | Hartford & New Haven | 3.4 | 82.2 | 15 |
156 | Bluefield-Beckley-Oak Hill | 2.9 | 61.2 | 37.3 |
7 | Boston (Manchester) | 2.8 | 83.3 | 14.5 |
Interesting! How is audio quality and reliability? I could imagine this is something that Spectrum doesn’t pay much attention to.Spectrum - Madison Wisconsin
Interesting! How is audio quality and reliability? I could imagine this is something that Spectrum doesn’t pay much attention to.
The last place I lived at had Mediacom (New Lisbon Wisconsin) and it didn't have cable radio but the local channels were available in clear quam so not encrypted unlike SpectrumI should try this on my service (Mediacom).
c
That's exactly what I was trying to say. Sorry if I wasn't clear.I also have had Mediacom and never had radio stations as part of the lineup.
Having actually worked for what's now Spectrum, and knowing people in tech there, I find it very, very doubtful that any Spectrum system anywhere is actually still carrying analog FM. That's 20 MHz of spectrum that's actually used these days for return paths for cable modems. And they're certainly not adding new LPFM stations or the "cable-only" K-Love stations with fake calls you put in your list.That's exactly what I was trying to say. Sorry if I wasn't clear.
Mediacom had local channels for free while spectrum doesn't.
Spectrum does cable radio while Mediacom does NOT do cable radio.
What kind of radio plugs into a cable outlet?It actually sounds just as good as having a outdoor FM antenna.
I just have spectrum internet and just out of silly grins I decided to plug my radio in to the cable outlet and that's how I found out about it.
I also run my own cable radio station and I have a few of my own RF modulators for different projects such as restoring vintage TVs.
My neighborhood can pickup my RF modulators due to me having a landlord I can't add a filter so my neighbors can pick up my vintage TV projects.