I know what news is. What is alternative?Because WINS-FM HD2 is Alt 92.3 HD2, running alternative, while WINS-FM is news.
I know what news is. What is alternative?Because WINS-FM HD2 is Alt 92.3 HD2, running alternative, while WINS-FM is news.
I know what news is. What is alternative?
Never because the company that created HD radio wants all the money.https://ratings.****************/content/arb001
0.1 rating for ALT 92.3 on HD Radio. I wonder when HD radio will become more widely available and cheaper
This would cannibalize on WNEW.Maybe make 94.7 Pop?
I've said it before but I'll say it again. Give WCBS 880 an FM simulcast on 94.7. You don't let a station with WCBS's wonderful billing sink. And sinking it is, stuck on the AM band while WINS is #5 in the latest NYC ratings with its FM simulcast.
There must be a way. And ... stop discounting the strength of WCBS's all-news programming and play to its strengths. It can be saved, and it can be strengthened, *IF* they want to take the actions needed to keep that revenue stream flowing.
Audacy “NewsRadio 880” WCBS-AM New York ($29.7 million), which returned to the top 10 after ranking 11th in 2022.
The creator sold HD off to vulture capitalists, didn't it?Never because the company that created HD radio wants all the money.
94.7 isn't great, but it's better than nothing. KYW is on a class A FM in Philadelphia, although Philly isn't as large in area and population.
As for WCBS's AM signal. I've never noticed it being weak anywhere in the tri-state area.
I have to agree with you there. Besides, a music format will make money even if it's nowhere near what WINS or WCBS make. That would still be better than nothing. I think a WCBS 880 simulcast on FM should only be used as a last resort for Audacy.If news on radio is an automatic tune-out for anyone born after 1980, what's the point of putting it on FM? Just let it continue on AM until the audience becomes too old to sell to Madison Avenue, then flip to brokered programming, foreign language or go dark. Leave 94.7 alone unless there's some other musical format that can connect with advertisers better than The Block does -- and given the hardwired-for-rhythmic nature of much of the NYC populace, the current format on 94.7 might be the safest choice for the foreseeable future.
IMO, the cost of allowing WCBS to wither is higher than the cost of blowing up a weak sister jukebox.
That’s pretty impressive for WINS to increase billing that much. As I’ve said before, the only mistake Audacy made by flipping Alt 92.3 was not doing it much sooner.I would normally be the last person to root for another NYC FM to flip to an AM simulcast but it makes the most sense in this case.
First of all there is more future for growth in spoken word formats than music formats on terrestrial radio at this point. WCBS already has the heritage and proven track record with news-talk, and that should be protected.
WINS revenue rose nearly 25 percent after it added the 92.3 FM simulcast. If WCBS 880 could also increase its revenue by even 20 percent with a 94.7 FM simulcast, that would be worth about $6 million. Wouldn't that exceed the value of WXBK's basement-dwelling current format, keeping in mind 'The Block' also has its own set of operating costs right now?
Finally, while reviewing the BIA numbers, all of those top stations are successful on their own merit. There no mention of cluster performance, cost-per-point or any of the other weak excuses put forth here attempting to justify a failing station.