Raleigh/Durham - RadioInsight
- WTKK '106-1 FM Talk' is at a record 9.9 share, marking the third month they've led the market. Perhaps the '22 midterms drove this rise, though they've not led the market like this in their 12-year talk incarnation before, which has spanned many significant elections. WUNC-FM closed in on them a bit this period.
- Country formats WQDR and WNCB "B 93.9" both dropped after leveling a bit over the summer/early fall, WQDR falling nearly a whole share.
- CHR competitors WDCG "G-105" and WPLW/WWPL "Pulse FM" both in the low 2's; Pulse actually improving from a 1.5 to a 2.0, while G-105 slid to a 2.3. Per RadioInsight.com, this is their lowest share since Spring 1977, which I think is around the time they shed their "Durham's Country Giant" format for rock and the "G-105" handle (looks like they went CHR in 1981).
- For the second period in a row, WDCG 'G-105' is beaten by '95-3 The Beat', a signal fed by their HD-2 channel! "The Beat" garnered a 2.6 share on two translators (95.3 in Raleigh and 95.1 in Durham).
- The "WRAL News Plus" format (WRAL-FM HD3 and translators 96.5 in Durham/99.3 in Raleigh) goes from a 0.1 to a 0.2 (they're airing some Duke sports as well as their TV News audio repeats. On the board, if barely.
- The 'Buzz' sports format, which vacated these translators and remains on WDNC (AM 620) and WCLY (AM 1550-itself vacated by AAA '95-7 That Station') went from a 0.2 to a 0.4.
- Looking specifically at the Curtis and iHeart clusters, it's amazing to see which stations are leading and which are bringing up the rear. I can recall when 'G-105' was the leader in the local iHeart stable while WQDR (and even WPTF prior to WTKK's 2010 debut), led Curtis. Of course, these are the 'horse race' numbers, but still interesting to monitor.