Tibbs2 said:
It would just be easier to flush the money than try to make that cluster a success. It won't be worth tens of millions ever.
I always thought Horne sounded best and had the most success a few years back when they were simulcasting a talk format on both 105.3 and 850 as "Talk Radio AM and FM, WKVL". They had Walker Johnson and Todd in the morning (by far the most entertaining morning show in town at the time), and they also had Neil
Boortz (before 'NOX stole him away), and Sean Hannity. They also had Tonya Stout Brown doing a local afternoon show for awhile too. I guess this was just too much money to spend for Horne, but that was by far the best format they've done on 105.3.
Personally, I think the AAA format on 105.3 right now is going nowhere. If they are going to do AAA then they should drop the "Farragut's independent voice" bit and focus on Knoxville as a whole, since they are now the only AAA station and a lot of Knoxville listeners miss "the River". Or if they must focus on making it a Farragut focused station, then they would be better off ratings and advertising-wise to go with something like classic hits, oldies, AC, or maybe even smooth jazz. Or another good choice might be classic country. It has done really well down the road in Chattanooga, and might pull a few shares even on a rimshot signal like 105.3. (I know we already have "Merle FM", but it isn't an all classic country station and it has a horrible signal. Even worse than 105.3's coverage if you ask me).
Anyway, it just seems like Horne has given up on doing anything productive with their stations. Sure, they are rimshot, suburban signals that are never going to have huge numbers, but if they were actually programmed and researched a little more, I bet they could probably at least pull a 1.5 to 2 share on 105.3 with the right niche format. 105.3 may be spotty downtown and to the north, but it is as strong as any of the other class A signals in the west part of town and that's where the ad money is.