O
ohgary
Guest
As an outsider to the industry, put talk radio back on AM where it belongs.
willcail said:When did Fox news start broadcasting news? Seriously there is a Georgetown study that people who watches Fox News are bout 60% misinformed.
Chuck Douglas said:willcail said:When did Fox news start broadcasting news? Seriously there is a Georgetown study that people who watches Fox News are bout 60% misinformed.
I hear they also have terrible grammer skills!
Nu_Roo_2 said:Chuck Douglas said:willcail said:When did Fox news start broadcasting news? Seriously there is a Georgetown study that people who watches Fox News are bout 60% misinformed.
I hear they also have terrible grammer skills!
Hmmm...could that be cuz most of them womens who watches Fox News becomes grammers before they turns 30?
ohgary said:As an outsider to the industry, put talk radio back on AM where it belongs.
OhioMediaWatch said:ohgary said:As an outsider to the industry, put talk radio back on AM where it belongs.
Why? If the listeners are on FM, why shouldn't talk radio be there?
We've had traditional talk radio on the FM dial since the mid-1980's here, and it's been very, very successful.
What music formats do you think are being "squeezed out" because talk/spoken word stations have started showing up on FM? Do those music formats appeal to you, specifically as one listener, or would they have a shot at commercial viability?
Chuck Douglas said:I hear they also have terrible grammer skills!
Talk doesnt need the fidelity that FM provides, AM is very well suited for talkWhy? If the listeners are on FM, why shouldn't talk radio be there?
Doesnt have any relevance to my comment.We've had traditional talk radio on the FM dial since the mid-1980's here, and it's been very, very successful.
Hmm, Lets see, Jazz is going away, no bluegrass, no gospel, No Rock, No hip hop, no oldies. Radio stations were suppose to serve the community no milk it for whatever cash they can.What music formats do you think are being "squeezed out" because talk/spoken word stations have started showing up on FM? Do those music formats appeal to you, specifically as one listener, or would they have a shot at commercial viability?
ohgary said:Talk doesnt need the fidelity that FM provides, AM is very well suited for talkWhy? If the listeners are on FM, why shouldn't talk radio be there?
Irrelevant. The talk stations that have already migrated to FM do MUCH better P25-54, who aren't nearly as willing, as a whole, to listen to AM radio, regardless of content.
The listeners - and therefore, the money - are MUCH higher in numbers on FM than AM.
ohgary said:Talk doesnt need the fidelity that FM provides, AM is very well suited for talk
Doesnt have any relevance to my comment.
Hmm, Lets see, Jazz is going away, no bluegrass, no gospel, No Rock, No hip hop, no oldies. Radio stations were suppose to serve the community no milk it for whatever cash they can.
Jazz is going away, no bluegrass, no gospel, No Rock, No hip hop, no oldies.
ohgary said:No gospel
Nu_Roo_2 said:OhioMedia, one pertinent fact you're overlooking is that even before BNS-FM flipped, Columbus had fewer BIG-SIGNAL music choices than any other market its size. Now that dubious distinction is even more acute. That makes the flip a negative for music listeners, especially when there is already significant format overlap among the relatively-limited big signals, e.g. SNY and LZT.
Nu_Roo_2 said:For instance, Classic Hits, Adult Hits, Smooth Jazz, Alternative, AAA, and mutiple distinctly different shadings of AC and Hot AC have NEVER been tried on big signals here. And the formats that HAVE/ARE being done haven't come remotely close to exhausting all the possible approaches to execution.
Nu_Roo_2 said:That said, I should again repeat that *I* never said Talk doesn't belong on FM, or that the Fan will turn out to be a business failure choice for 97.1. All I said was the change is much more of a negative for music listeners here than it would be in other similar-sized markets. Now there's even less hope for a good radio music profile on stations that aren't just "let's pretend we're in Columbus" rimshots. No need for format specifics to make that assertion.
xiradiodotcom said:Chuck Douglas said:I hear they also have terrible grammer skills!
I hope you purposely misspelled grammAr.