Or how about this?
92.3 The Block
94.7 K-Love
95.5 WFAN
ALT 101.9
Perhaps a relaunch of AMP would do better.
Or third if you consider WKTU to be a sort of "adult rhythmic CHR". And the rapidly increasing ethnicity of the whole market makes "regular" CHR a poor future prospect.That would probably take some audience from Audacy's WNEW which is currently doing pretty well, and it would almost certainly come in a distant second to Z100 in the CHR battle again.
Or third if you consider WKTU to be a sort of "adult rhythmic CHR". And the rapidly increasing ethnicity of the whole market makes "regular" CHR a poor future prospect.
iHeartMedia has something like that in the Lower Rio Grande Valley on KBFM. It works well over there, but I don't know how well it would go over elsewhere.How about a rhythmic CHR-reggaeton hybrid? Anyone tried that?
I mean a KTU-style English-language rhythmic CHR playlist with a generous amount of reggaeton hits mixed in, predominantly English-speaking jocks who routinely mix some Spanish into their presentation, and bilingual imaging.
Totally different Hispanic audience. LRGV is 100% Mexican heritage. Most of the Hispanic meters in NYC are in Dominican homes. Racially and culturally you can't find two so very different groups.iHeartMedia has something like that in the Lower Rio Grande Valley on KBFM. It works well over there, but I don't know how well it would go over elsewhere.
Totally different Hispanic audience. LRGV is 100% Mexican heritage. Most of the Hispanic meters in NYC are in Dominican homes. Racially and culturally you can't find two so very different groups.
On the other hand, Nielsen indicates that just under 49% of NYC Hispanics are Spanish dominant; that means either no English or some English but not proficient.The top reggaetón hits are familiar and popular in NYC regardless, though. You'll hear Bad Bunny, Daddy Yankee, Rosalia, J Balvin, Becky G etc. all over NYC in clubs, stores, restaurants, you name it. The songs are catchy and the artists frequently cross over to English language media during awards shows, in collaborations with English language artists, etc. I don't even speak Spanish but I'm accustomed to hearing Spanish all around me, every day, and this music sounds familiar, like part of the fabric of NYC to me.
On the other hand nearly every Hispanic person in my circle of coworkers, friends and acquaintances is bilingual, speaks English perfectly, consumes English language media and culture, and knows English language hits as well as the Latin American ones. If there is anywhere that a rhythmic CHR-reggaetón hybrid seems like it should work, it is NYC.
The issue is that, while the station gets a 5 or 6 share in Puerto Rico, 100% of the audience there is Spanish dominant. If you convert that to a NYC format, where only about 13% of the potential audience is Spanish dominant, you have a 0.5 share .
Out of curiosity, a few and not sustainable. With ads in Spanish, jocks speaking "Spanglish" and lots of unfamiliar songs, it would be very different from occasional fun at a party or a club.You are assuming that only a non-English speaking, Spanish dominant audience would listen to such a format in NYC, though. Your Puerto Rico model doesn't allow us to see how many English dominant listeners there could be.
Bilingual formats have been tried all the way back to Super Q in Miami in 1979 and they never worked very well. Never got non-Hispanic listening, and the Hispanic listener responded with "if I want music in English I know where to go".The proposal is for an English language Rhythmic CHR station with more Latin American flavor than any existing station in NYC. It would combine at least 75% English language rhythmic CHR hits with the top reggaetón crossovers from artists like those mentioned above, which by definition cross over to an English speaking audience. Consensus reggaetón songs, to use a term seen frequently here.
But the real issue is that Hispanic ad budgets don't have a place for such a format and would require English creative from Spanish language shops. The client would say, "let the general market agency make the buy and provide the creative". The Hispanic market shop would lose part of the budget, and be very annoyed with the group that created the station.The hosts would be predominantly English speaking but who may inject some bilingualism. An English language Rhythmic CHR for a New York audience which includes a lot of English speaking 2nd+ generation Hispanics. Not a station for Hispanics who are not English proficient since Spanish language stations for that audience already exist.
Times change, but I don't think there is a niche for this.
That’s not how that works.Or how about this?
92.3 The Block
94.7 K-Love
95.5 WFAN
ALT 101.9
Meanwhile, in Boston, iHeartMedia has been keeping WBZ on AM only.Other owners have put the All-News format on FM in Washington DC and Seattle.
Not sure why this is a foregone conclusion. Yes, they could move it to FM, but that move has not paid off every time for Audacy. All it does, in most cases, is move that audience from AM to FM, not exposing younger audiences to the format, in turn losing the revenue from the FM format that they killed. Let's face it folks, the audience for all-news radio isn't getting younger.92.3 WINS and 94.7 WCBS. Or maybe 92.3 WCBS and 94.7 WINS.
WCBS is already on the FM dial. It’s a classic hits station92.3 WINS and 94.7 WCBS. Or maybe 92.3 WCBS and 94.7 WINS.
I just don't know how those two stations can remain AM only and still be among the best billing stations in America? I can understand Audacy doesn't want to pull the trigger yet. But how much longer can it wait in NYC? Audacy has already given FM simulcasts to its All-News stations in Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco and Philadelphia. Other owners have put the All-News format on FM in Washington DC and Seattle.
Audacy has only four All-News stations solely on the AM band: WINS and WCBS in New York, as well as WWJ Detroit and KRLD Dallas.