Very interesting. I'm wondering if they are going for affiliates or buying stations to duplicate the format. I trust they realize, on AM anyway, the Upper Midwest is very different from other areas. Ground conductivity, for example, is exceptional in the region. From my travels in North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas, those AM stations really get out. A 1,000 watt non-directional AM might rival a 100,000 watt FM's coverage. It was probably about 15 years ago, but on one drive back, before Clear Channel bought KFYR, I listened to the station from the Canadian border to about North Platte, Nebraska. Sure KFYR is 550 (I think) and 5,000 watts, but wow, what a range!
The other thing is the markets are quite a bit smaller. In such markets there are enough stations to grab most of the money making formats without a bunch of stations left out on the sidelines. When you reach the larger markets, there are so many stations, if you start having success, chances are almost 100% a direct competitor will pop up among those stations on the sideline. The problem then becomes splitting a certain size audience between two stations when the audience can only sustain one station.
I'm sure they could find a station in San Antonio, Dallas/Ft. Worth or Houston if they have the cash to invest to either lease or buy but it would scare me to death because it would be so risky. By comparison, it's like a one or two location little burger place trying to compete with McDonalds. You'd need a great game plan, solid patient and understanding investors and all the know-how you can muster up.
As a program director once told me, it is easy to become #1 and much harder to stay #1. He said once you reach the top, you have to out-think your competitors: they are trying to use your plan to build a better mousetrap, so you have to out-think them and always have the best mousetrap constantly.
That reminds me of a station promo I heard some tears ago. It went like this: As a public service we'd like to explain to our competitors who are listening to us exactly how to be the number one station. You simply do....It's not that difficult. You guys are overthinking this. and concluded by saying Doing our part to help local stations be the best they can be. Pretty brazen and funny but a little too close to real life to actually laugh.
If they wanted to lease KYND, all they need to do is call.