Beachdog said:Hate to disagree, but I am hearing The Sound in stores and restaurants all over the place. I think this is an early indicator of something that is doing quite well.
That 35th rank in June in the PPM test data says it all.
Beachdog said:Hate to disagree, but I am hearing The Sound in stores and restaurants all over the place. I think this is an early indicator of something that is doing quite well.
sam said:100.3 in LA -- is a train wreck - that happened. It sounds -- minute by minute -- like the end of a police chase -- just the wail of the sirens and 20 cops all yelling "get down -- get down -- get down". Number 1, No one could "Get Down" on "the sound" of 100.3. Your ears tell your mind to "HIDE -- Duck for Cover -- get under a bed -- because you are listening to a train wreck "IN PROGESS". I have heard better sounding High School and college stations. I have had better dog crap stick to the bottom of my shoe -- then "the sound" of 100.3. Thank goodness for commercials -- because after 6 months of no cash -- someone well take out the trash.
scooty430 said:From what was suggested by a poster who sounds knowledgable, the idea driving this is to buy the property at a low price, hold it for awhile, and then sell it.
What happens in between probably doesn't matter.
Though like "flipping a house," what worked a few years ago may not be so easy now....
955wdhf said:0.7....If that isn't an early indicator of monster success, I don't know what is?
Good call Bonneville...Glad you've got deep pockets, because with this big lemon, you're gonna need the juice!
I don't if they have deep pockets. Remember, they got the 99 cents only store deal from Radio-One for $137 mil.
Not bad for a pretty decent stick.
goriajk said:two years from now KSWD will do fine, and not at a 0.7 -
DavidEduardo said:goriajk said:two years from now KSWD will do fine, and not at a 0.7 -
eah, if it last two years, it will have a 1.1 like KSCA did... and like KSCA, they will blame it on the bad signal, too.
SuperRadioFan said:Come on David that song is really getting old!! This is not 1997 anymore. Are you comparing Bonneville mgmt with GWB?? Now you may be right about the 1.1 but these people (whom I have met) do NOT seem the type to make a weak excuse about the signal.
DavidEduardo said:Of course, the signal issue will be an easy excuse, since the KSCA signal and the Sound signals are virtually identical.
But the issue remains that even in PPM it seems that there is nust not a big enough potential cume base for that kind of station in LA.
SuperRadioFan said:[EDIT: As a follow up, it ocurred to me that like many people, I listen online to The Sound's stream..... So signal is not an issue for me, I have a friend who lives in Lompoc, do you think signal is an issue for him?
Which also brings up another point.... About a month ago, online they replaced their over the air commercials with instrumental filler. I can't be the only one who spends some time on a computer listening to them, so if PPM would credit the station with online listeners, what does that mean to an advertiser whose product will not be heard? Something wrong with the whole picture and the issue of AFTRA ... I also have listened and still listen to the online stream of another AAA station in an unrated market Westchester County in NYC area--- WXPK 107.1 The Peak and I hear every single commercial. Not that it means much for an advertiser 3000 miles away heh heh. Still don't get why some stations stream their commercials while others do not.
DavidEduardo said:Online streams that are not a perfect simulcast, and what you describe is not a simulcast, are considered by Arbitron to be separate stations, and will be listed separately in the ratings, whether diary based or PPM based.
So online listening subtracts from the audience of the on air signal.
SuperRadioFan said:IIRC that seems to contradict what you've said early on about how PPM "hears" the digitally encoded signal whether one hears it online thru their computer speakers or over the air. Did I remember incorrectly or has there been any new info discovered since I thought you said that.
In any case if stations don't get credit for online listening, there seems to be something wrong with that methodology. Did Arbitron ask the diary respondents if they listened online or over the air?
Another issue as has been discussed in the past is, with PPM, the unit does not care (after all its not human LOL!), I'll rephrase: The PPM does not register whether one is actively listening or just passively hearing the content. There's no way it could. This methodology stinks IMO because it's not accurate enough to give the advertisers the value they perceive in what they pay the radio station or agency to get their message out. And most probably won't ever realize that...
sam said:IF "AAA" means "all over the road" or "Play anything you have access to" -- then 100.3 in LA is on the mark. A High School kid must be picking the play list. There have always been 30 or 40 times more music and artists than the standard "top 40" songs. The backbone of true local radio has been selection of all that was "play-able" from standaeds to jazz to rock and country and even western. But tossing 5 different types of salads togather and adding raw meat is not a meal you can eat -- nor is it a "format". It's junk. Take it away before someone gets hurt. And I am sorry to hold back on my true feelings.
sam said:IF "AAA" means "all over the road" or "Play anything you have access to" -- then 100.3 in LA is on the mark. A High School kid must be picking the play list. There have always been 30 or 40 times more music and artists than the standard "top 40" songs. The backbone of true local radio has been selection of all that was "play-able" from standaeds to jazz to rock and country and even western. But tossing 5 different types of salads togather and adding raw meat is not a meal you can eat -- nor is it a "format". It's junk. Take it away before someone gets hurt. And I am sorry to hold back on my true feelings.
DavidEduardo said:As a rule, agencies that use AFTRA voice talent forbid stations from streaming their spots.