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New strange happenings at WYXC-AM 1270- Cartersville

  • Thread starter Goodtimesandgreatoldies
  • Start date

G

Goodtimesandgreatoldies

Guest
Now, WYXC-AM 1270 is back on the air playing Christmas. Their web site goes on and on about how many "experts" say that AM radio won`t exist in the next five years. What a stupid statement! Who are these so-called "experts"? The owners of WYXC have many ALOT of mistakes in the five years that they have owned the station. First, they stopped called the station WYXC on air and started using the liner News Talk 1270. This was after previous owners had a good local station going. Now, the new owners confused listeners. They also fired the former local airstaff and went with all canned FOX News automated garbage. David Paul (who sounds like Paul Lynde) was brought in to do the local Morning Show. Paul doesn`t fit in well with the local Cartersville country lifestyle. Now, they wonder why they are having problems.... Word is that previous owner Chip Rogers will lease the station and make it local again. They are enough local advertisers in the Cartersville area to keep WYXC-AM going.
 
Humm...Guess that "catastrophic damage to equipment" wasn't all that bad after all. Someone must have got to them and made them realize that a radio station on the air will get them more money in a sale than a dark one.
 
I think some good points are made by GoodTimesandGreat Oldies.

AM radio is, especially under the umbrella of a major metro market such as Atlanta, is not just as "write-off" -- it must be carefully, with dedication, with hard work and with knowledge be nursed to success -- it doesn't just "happen."

Especially when people who may have been interested in the station come to its aid and support when -- it's too late and the station has, for whatever reason, gone off the air.

Catastrophic equipment problems? Sure. Blame it on something or someone -- and I have no doubt that in their minds, the owners worked very hard to make the station more than a "community service" success. They found that owning a radio station at a couple of thousand watts requires even more hard work, more dedication and more ability and knowledge that just putting in a satellite receiver and letting Fox, Premier, TRN, Dial-Global or whatever have disjointed control of your radio station.

And that means not selling "ads" -- but having business interests in town who want to "buy" your product, just as we want listeners and consumers to do. Selling "ads" is only part of the equation. Obviously, with all those "alternatives" out there, management and ownership felt that it was a a battle that they couldn't overcome.

That's the way it is in so many similar and larger size markets. It's not just a problem of large corporations -- plenty of other stations and small corporations have the same problems, that being not enough knowledge on what it takes to be successful in this business. That's a shame.

There are quite a few "cheap" radio stations for sale today, many not breaking the "nut" of expenses -- and the blame is "no one is buying." Many aren't, but there are ways to change that -- and merely doing street corner remotes or putting a glut of national talk shows on the air, locking up the building at 3 p.m. and saying, "Well, the station's running ..." is not the answer.

Just because you can have syndication cheaper than paying a staff that is more than your morning guy -- and the right morning guy for the community -- is not the way to do it, even in small communities. Those are the ones that you have to be even better than the lousiest station in Atlanta -- and make a statement as valuable as the very best in the market.

It takes a LOT of work. The business doesn't walk in the door. And management/ownership has to know what is working in their community and what is not. Just "picking" a format is not the means to success. It involves being able to pay the bills while satisfying the needs of the local community.

"But I can't afford to do that," is a common excuse for those making $5,000 or $10,000 a month in billing. Then, maybe, you should seek another career option. Maybe it's not your fault, but maybe you can't make your success just by owning a radio station.

Some small communities are conducive to making two or three times that amount of billing -- but it takes a lot of work and constant work, at that. That's why, frankly, I think there may be too many radio stations. If it's not worht the time and trouble to build it without excuse, then, it's time to go dark.

And let's face it -- there's more talk over this little station that couldn't than when it was operating in the last five years. Is live and local the real answer? Who knows -- without a bit of study and a lack of "I want to do this format," instead of what the market really can bear.

It will be a tough call -- and small bank lenders hate small radio stations -- who can blame them? And unless the original owner has deep pockets, is he really willing to make the investment to do what's right? Only time will tell.

And the time is now. The reason? There aren't enough people listening to the station to matter right now. Three pages of public messages on a radio board won't solve the problems. Only a committed attitude with knowledge and ability will save the station.

It has, in all reality, nothing to do with "format." It has to do with making money while serving the community's needs and it may be completely different than what we might think.
 
I wanna be a Monday morning quarterback too, I wanna be a Monday morning quarterback too. These posts are silly. It is obvious by the spelling and theories of Goodtimes that he must be under the influence.
 
I apologize for the spelling.

Now, in your short post that obviously, without repeating the first two sentences to make your point, you as an "AtlBanker" have some much need opinion to what you would do.

Would YOU lend this radio station money and on what terms?

Thanks for your participation. You're up at the plate.

And this time, I think I got the spelling right.
 
AtlBanker said:
I wanna be a Monday morning quarterback too, I wanna be a Monday morning quarterback too. These posts are silly. It is obvious by the spelling and theories of Goodtimes that he must be under the influence.

To be Monday morning QB, you have to say something about the situation, not make fun of spelling errors. I'm interested to hear your answer to oaktree's questions. If you truly are a banker, would you lend ME the money to purchase this radio station? Your answer will indicate if you really are a banker.
 
What do they want for the signal?

I know a formerly local dude who could make the thing work.

Oh, and Paul Lynne was one hell of a talent, not that I'm praising David Paul.
 
Ok, I would have to agree this station still has some life left. Although I can't hear it in gwinnett, Still local radio has a place and a very viable place in the radio world. I also can't believe it, but Moby might be able to pull in some small numbers. I have only met the man twice both in business functions, and WAS LESS THAN IMPRESSED, he just wasnt a nice man.. BUT that was years ago, so I hold back all judgements, he is a very popular dude in the country small town areas, so WHO KNOWS????
 
Just to set the record straight, I sure as hell "ain't" that jackass.
 
lilburncommunityradio said:
... Moby might be able to pull in some small numbers... he is a very popular dude in the country small town areas, so WHO KNOWS????

It wouldn't be the first time his show would be on an AM signal. Not too long ago, his show aired on an AM country music trimulcast known as "Wolf Creek Broadcasting." They've since went back to music, or maybe they have Imus now, I don't know.
 
Wolf Creek was 770 WYHG Young Harris, 1400 WLSB Copper Hill both are about to be reprogrammed again from Timeless Favorites which ABC – Citadel is dropping. 1340 WALH Mountain City / Clayton which was sold for $70K and is dark.
 
Does WYXC-AM 1270 have a website and does it have streaming audio on the internet?
 
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