I think in my market here in Biloxi - Gulfport, Mississippi needs a second CHR station or make the one we have here at 107.1 the monkey wxyk fm upgrade or swap with a bigger signal than small 107.1 fm signal!
e-dawg said:atlantaboy said:e-dawg said:Portland, OR (#23) should get a second CHR. The heritage CHR, the other Z100 sounds so conservative lately. They used to be a lot more rhythmic, but since CBS swapped stations with Clear Channel, they put all the rhythmic music onto 107.5.
In 2012, being "conservative" is playing rhythmic music - rhythmic pop has been around for at least 3 years now - what's "liberal" is new Alt/Pop and Alt/Rock (Gotye, Foster The People, Fun, Adele, etc.)
Posters need to stop equating Hot AC with "conservativism", because at this point, most Hot ACs are MORE liberal than most CHRs in terms of adding cutting-edge music
Try to listen to Portland radio, you wont find much rhythmic product on the radio, even old skool rhythmic. I guess you haven't been or listen to PDX radio at all.
e-dawg said:Since you are from Atlanta, Z100 sounds like the Q100 or the STAR 94 in terms of playing more modern rock, pop tracks instead of rhythmic.
atlantaboy said:RobynWattsV2.0 said:As far as markets that really need a CHR, my vote goes to Florence, SC.
What happened to 93X or 103X (can't remember which one...)?
atlantaboy said:Necrat said:What about Hartford, CT? CC owns both CHRs. WKCI and WKSS....
WKCI is definitely out of New Haven (not Hartford)
reelyreal said:atlantaboy said:Necrat said:What about Hartford, CT? CC owns both CHRs. WKCI and WKSS....
WKCI is definitely out of New Haven (not Hartford)
WKCI's Hamden stick covers almost all of CT except for the extreme northeast and northwest hills. It's city-grade in Hartford but plays second fiddle to big sister WKSS, and is "kind of" a New Haven-focused station... You know, as focused as any primarily Premium Choice-programmed station can be.
Skim said:St. Louis. Clear Channel's KSLZ is terrible: One local airshift all day, stale music, slow on ads. Despite what some have said, Y98 is not CHR. No one in STL is playing the rhythmic pop to any large extent.
RollTide said:Skim said:St. Louis. Clear Channel's KSLZ is terrible: One local airshift all day, stale music, slow on ads. Despite what some have said, Y98 is not CHR. No one in STL is playing the rhythmic pop to any large extent.
Sounds like the exact same situation in Huntsville, except Cumulus owned WZYP has two local air shifts a day, mornings and afternoons. No jock on in midday at all and they were doing the boring Billy Bush show in evenings until it got dropped. Stale, old music, slow to add new music, boring stale imaging. They play 80s for lunch at noon every day and all morning on Friday mornings for gosh sakes! Totally alienate what is supposed to be their core audience! They barely play any rhythmic pop, and if they do, its usually only the ones that are in the billboard top 10. WZYP is NOT CHR. More like Hot A/C. Huntsville has no REAL CHR. I've been screaming for one on the Alabama board for years to no evail.
atlantaboy said:^I think the problem with Florence SC and Fayetteville NC is they don't have a huge percentage of young listeners - I'd guess that most of the population has basically been "stuck" there for generations, and ambitious high schoolers flee the area as soon as they graduate - same with Greenville NC (who's CHR is basically a Hot AC)
I know I'm generalizing, but that's just the impression I got when visiting these places ten years ago
Marv-L.A. said:WBBM-FM was moved to the Mediabase top 40 panel last Friday.
Marv-L.A. said:The issue with Columbus is indeed signals; WNCI has been the #1 CHR/Pop station in the Midwest for at least 20 years, and I also agree that 4 country stations is absurd, although country WCOL-FM tied WNCI for #1 in the current book with an astonishing 9.4 share.
Country's been the most-listened to music format in the nation for 20 years, and has been tops in listeners among all formats for all but 18 months of those past 20 years, when it was replaced by News-Talk in the spring of 2008, but returned to the top in the fall of 2010.