J
jimsocks
Guest
Can you guess which station is going to flip? This information comes from a very trusted source. Get out your kenny chesney t shirt.
Boston also has only one country station--Greater Media's WKLB-FM 102.5. The station is quite successful in this rather non-country market, but from what the dyed-in-the-wool country fans say, it ain't really country.jimsocks said:Philadelphia is one of the only markets i can think of that only has one country station. There is an obvious hole in the market.
jimsocks said:Philadelphia is one of the only markets i can think of that only has one country station. There is an obvious hole in the market.
Or, as they called it when WRCP went country from their 2043 Locust Street studios in 1967, the Rittenhouse Ranch!evolve991 said:LMAO genuine hereford rhinestone narrowtoes and a 15 gallon stetson on Rittenhouse Square LOL
jimsocks said:Can you guess which station is going to flip? This information comes from a very trusted source. Get out your kenny chesney t shirt.
One thing that has changed is that people move all over the country so there are former "Southern" folks living in the Northeast, just as Atlanta has a lot of former Philly/Wilmington area people living there
WOW. I don't know where to start; the fact that you're arguing ethnic shift patterns based on your recollection of 3 relocated companies, or that your argument is framed on the assumption that everyone in the South and Texas listens to country music. Well, I live in the deep south and I don't listen to country music so I'm going to go on a limb here and say there might be something flawed with your reasoning.MikefromDelaware said:In the 60's, country music was pretty much an unknown genre in the Philly/Wilmington area. It certainly wasn't mainstream music for this region. Today, one of the top FM stations in Philly (WXTU) and one of the top stations in the Wilmington market (WXCY) play country. Country doesn't mean western, in a broad sense it means southern music and attitude and folks from Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, The Carolina's, Tennesee, and Virginia generally don't consider themselves to be western. What brought the demand for this form of music to this area is the corporations moving people around in large numbers. In Wilmington: DuPont, Astra Zenica, Hercules, numerous credit card banks have brought many people to the area from the South and yes Texas too. Philly has all sorts of large corporations operating there and they too moved people around causing the same influx of cultural change to happen there too. Those folks bring their cultural likes and dislikes with them. Back in the 1960's there weren't any taco places in Delaware (can't speak for Philly, but doubt there were any then), as then the only Hispanic folks here in Wilmington and probably Philly were from Puerto Rico. Today the Mexican hispanics are here in large numbers and today there are all sorts of Mexican restaurants, food stores, and yes even Delaware has two Mexican oriented radio stations. One in upper Delaware and one in lower Delaware. All that has to do with people moving around. People are even more moble today than then in the 1960's. Also as some groups population grows (what are today's minorities will be tomorrow's majority) and others shrink that too will affect the musical formats of the radio markets in both Philly and Wilmington. Nothing is static.