so when does Pulse launch??
http://pulse87.com/?gclid=CIrMyJmM1JACFQIcHgodGQNTOA#
http://pulse87.com/?gclid=CIrMyJmM1JACFQIcHgodGQNTOA#
LibertyNT said:is 87.7 even a FCC Frequency for Commercial radio?
Last i heard rarely was 87.9 used....
87.7 is never gunna happen...
FreestylePete said:The week of Jan 14th i can hardly wait! Exciting radio comes back to NY
Yeah, it's so far out of the box, and out of the band...87.7 HA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! such a non issue to any commercial broadcaster.Jeffrey said:FreestylePete said:The week of Jan 14th i can hardly wait! Exciting radio comes back to NY
Agreed. It will hopefully be the 1st NYC. station to think outside of the box in years.
LibertyNT said:is 87.7 even a FCC Frequency for Commercial radio?
Last i heard rarely was 87.9 used....
87.7 is never gunna happen...
Bongwater said:Analog TV 6/FM 87.7 can be a GOLDMINE to a forward thinking broadcaster who can seamlessly run a combination TV/Radio station ("Radio You Can See"?) using music videos. Add a video/audio web feed and BINGO! Would work great for a music or all news station-even talk.
(That is until 2009....But it's likely the analog TV broadcast cut off date will be pushed back at least another year because most people still don't know of the coming change or confuse it with digital cable or something because most TV broadcasters/networks are still WAAAYYY behind in getting the word out.....)
neo11 said:Again, the 87.7 in Anchorage seems to have been doing this for quite a while, and I think with full FM modulation, so my guess is that the Pulse 87.7 will keep using full FM modulation as well.
If the Pulse does something really unique and out of the box, and really catches the vibe and the music scene of the city that is ignored by the existing stations, then I have a feeling that it *will* be successful. Keep in mind that they will not have the same pressure for ratings that "real" radio stations have, and as such will be under fewer constraints to "play it safe." If they can build a loyal following that will get local advertisers results, they will be fine.
FreestylePete said:I agree. If it plays the music that New Yorkers really want to hear like current dance/house music at night and other street songs of the city during the day then listeners will flock to the station.