jakej said:I don't know, Nu, but if you reveal it be sure and let CBus know how many of them AREN'T modern! (It'd be over 75% of the total, if that term wasn't the most "notoriously fuzzy" one of them all!!!)
True, and "Alternative" isn't much better -- especially with the within-format fregmentation demonstrated by stations like 106.7.
Radio-Info spotlights "Ross on Radio," and in an interesting recent edition called "Does Imaging Still matter," Ross talked about trying to image a station like WRFF in Philly (which likely provided the model for 106.7): "...there is indeed no traditional attempt to explain the station in one slogan, possibly because "Mass-Appeal Alternative Rock Of The '70s, '80s, '90s and Now with a Lot of Music and Some Hot AC Functionality" would be as long as some of the songs." (http://www.edisonresearch.com/home/archives/2007/12/does_imaging_st.php)
While digging up that quote, I ran across a more-recent Ross comment which supports my personal wish that CC Columbus had instead gone with a more Hot-AC version like 94.1 in Cincy, or an AAA (and I realize that few of the posters here would agree, except perhaps AAA proponent Bill Harmonic). Referring to the hole in Philly for WRFF, Ross said, "Not every market is going to have the same conditions as Philly (no current-based Hot AC or Modern AC, no other Alternative, and a history of female-friendly Alternative in the market)." Well, that certainly *doesn't* match the Columbus landscape. Columbus *does* have a current-based Hot AC, and it *does* have another Alternative. I know CC did research here, and maybe there was a hole for what Radio 106.7 is doing, but it sure doesn't seem as clearcut as the situation in Philly. OTOH, looking at the glass half-full, there's no doubt this format choice made incredibly more sense than what they did with 93.3 (as usual, I look for every possible opportunity to knock that monumental wasted opportunity called WLZT).