I've lived in LA and South Florida, and I found them to be very different culturally. Michael Mann could probably put the difference into pictures.
Michael Moore could probably put the difference in a comparison of restaurant serving sizes.
I've lived in LA and South Florida, and I found them to be very different culturally. Michael Mann could probably put the difference into pictures.
With Entercom running WAXY as an alternative station, it will do just fine with it's targeted audience, and just may pick up many more listeners with it's 100k signal
I wonder if south palm beach will help ratings. I also
Wonder how far north the signal will reach.
I would include WRTO.The few that are not, WCMQ and WRMA...
I would include WRTO.
All three are fine in Dade County, but I would not program any of them in English
I must admit that this caught me by surprise. When looking at the format "holes" in the market, Rock/Alternative was a major one. On the other hand, CHR is over-represented in this market.
However, two other formats that might work in this market:
1. Dance/EDM with a Latin flavor. I'd almost think of it as a sort of Power 96-of-the-early-90s format. Lots of mixing, some Spanish-language music thrown in.
2. Classic Hip Hop - something similar to Boom 92 in Houston, with perhaps more of a focus on mix shows and even some Latin flavor mixed in.
However, this format seems to be given to immediate launch success but a failure to get into a permanent orbit.
Looking at this corporately, Entercom has a lot of history with the Alternative format in a lot of markets like Sacramento. No history with EDM or hip hop. If they don't know the format, they won't know how to sell it, and this station wouldn't benefit from the synergies available around the company. So Alternative is an easy choice in the corporate office. Based on what I see around the country, they'll stick with the format a while and see if it takes hold.
Entercom is very focused on non-ethnic formats.
It will be interesting to see if owning the new stations in San Diego, LA, and Miami change the thinking in the company. My sense is it won't.
It's about time! There are still some white people in South Florida, and we've been grossly underserved for over a decade.
Miami has seven FM stations aimed mostly mainstream, not that much different in sound than if they were in Minneapolis or Seattle:
93.1 WFEZ Soft AC
93.9 WMIA Hot AC
99.9 WKIS Country
101.5 WLYF AC
102.7 WMXJ Classic Hits/Oldies
104.3 WAXY-FM Sports (till it switched to Alternative)
105.9 WBGG Classic Rock
and with a decent car radio, you can pick up 100,000 watt 97.9 WRMF, 98.7 WKGR, 103.1 WIRK and 107.9 WEAT from West Palm Beach.
Plus I'm not sure that Top 40 97.3 WFLC and 100.7 WHYI sound all that much different than Top 40 stations elsewhere. So I doubt anyone in Miami should feel he's not being served by local radio.
(Maybe only having one English-language Talk station, WIOD, is an oddity for a market the size of Miami, especially when the AM dial was home to several Talk stations a few years ago.
I don't see this change working. A rock format in South Florida is a risky chance. The demographics are not there, and those who have remained in South Florida grew up on stations with a rhythmic lean. I would of taken a chance on a classic Hip Hop/rhythmic format (yes, I know that is risky too and longevity is also a question). The current change was a bold move, and I wish them success.