Will someone else change to hip-hop?
Why would anyone do that? The 1 share who love the format will be able to find it on HD2.
Will someone else change to hip-hop?
Probably not. Hot will be the closest to do anything, but they’re faring better by continuing to do what they’re doing now.Will someone else change to hip-hop?
Or even easier, the iHeart app on their own phones.Why would anyone do that? The 1 share who love the format will be able to find it on HD2.
Why is everyone so convinced that 93.3 is going FM sports? To me, it would seem 96.5 would be the logical signal for that,
I'm not convinced sports will be the flip, but if it is, it will be a strange position for Bonneville to be in with 710.
My guess is similar to yours - 93.3 simulcasts KJR 950, and gets the KJR-FM calls. KUBE calls could move to either 95.7, 106.1 or to some AM station across the country.Place yer bets! LOL. My guess:
93.3 Sports simulcast w 950, calls KJR-FM as calls are only important for branding IF they actually are used for branding. As 950 currently does.
95.7 remains The Jet. New calls but not KUBE. Maybe jet themed? looks like KJJT is open, for example. Doesn't really matter as they do not use the calls at all in the imagining.
96.5 is not broken, do not fix that which is not broken....
KUBE calls? Could throw them on 106.1 but unless you are using the calls to build a brand I suspect they will park them on some random market 250 station. KUBE branding is hardly what it used to be in the Seattle market- not sure there is much value there. Might even be negative value in some minds.
But then, what do I know? The music programming on 96.5 HD2 is so much better than 107.7 right now I really wish iHeart would move that format to 93.3 and just take them out. But that seems to be a pretty small pie to slice (Alt Rock) at this point.
RadioInsight tweeted (via a reply to me) that they'd been hearing about a likely simulcast of KJR 950 coming to 93.3. While I wouldn't say it's absolutely going to happen, RadioInsight is known to be a reliable source of radio news. If 93.3 does become a simulcast of KJR 950, there's a real possibility it'll swap calls with 95.7. It's true that WBBM and KCBS didn't replace calls on their FM simulcasts, however, KNX Los Angeles did when they started simulcasting on 97.1. This means KKJR-FM is extremely unlikely if they can just move KJR-FM.Why is everyone so convinced that 93.3 is going FM sports? To me, it would seem 96.5 would be the logical signal for that, as from what I understand, they're carrying most of the play by play also on 950. That would move Jack to 93.3, though it probably won't be known as Jack anymore. As for swapping the calls with 95.7, that won't happen. Remember, when 102.9 went sports a few years ago, the calls were not changed then, nor were the FM calls moved when WBBM or KCBS went FM. In my above scenario, the KJAQ calls will move to 93.3 and the KUBE calls would move to 96.5, but that would be the extent of the call letter changes, though if they're changing calls they may change the 96.5 calls to something like KKJR. There's another example of that, in Atlanta. The only reason I don't see Jack staying around in this situation is because iHeart isn't using that brand in many markets. As far as I know, the only one they've launched on their own is Jacksonville, and they've dropped the brand in Sacramento and I think in at least one other market. They still own the station in Baltimore, but again, that was held over from CBS.
Aren't the young high school/college demographics just using Spotify, or Apple Music, or whatever's hot now?Will someone else change to hip-hop?
It's called a community service. If you have enough AM stations which are incapable of making little or no local ad dollars, what better use for one?The BIN 850 cume is 12,000. I doubt more than 12, or 120, are listening at any time...
Seriously, does the BIN network succeed anywhere? It's not in the Atlanta ratings, and 910 San Francisco cumes half of that.
Aren't the young high school/college demographics just using Spotify, or Apple Music, or whatever's hot now?
Exactly. Folks on this board need to discontinue the assumption that teens, or a young audience who like one kind of music is loyal to station X, and another group to station Y. Now you have literally hundreds of streaming options, social media platforms, and subscription music all right there on their phone.Pretty hard to generalize about the behavior of young people, other to say it varies.