radioskeptic said:
No, “blowing up” a station means eliminating the format completely. It doesn’t mean moving an existing format from one frequency to another within the same band, or moving the programming and call to the other band, and it certainly doesn’t mean beginning a simulcast. At least, not when professionals use the phrase.
If you want to address my arguments by impugning my credentials instead of what I said, I guess that's your right. It just shows the weakness of what you are arguing.
Anyway, if they start simulcasting all-news KYW on 94.1, what do you think the numbers will be on 1060? They'll be close to 0, yes, at least after some period of adjustment? Who is going to keep listening on AM when the same thing is available on FM?
Whether that's "blowing up" the station or not, the effect is the same. They are zeroing out the ratings on the AM signal.
radioskeptic said:
We have separate figures for the two WPEN’s only because they’re not simulcasting 100 percent of the time. KCBS (740) and KFCR-FM (106.9) are 100 percent simulcast, and thus don’t need separate ratings. So we have no indication of how the KCBS audience is split between AM and FM.
I don't know what deficiencies may exist in the signal on 106.9, which may cause some people, who can't get 106.9, to still listen on 740. But here, there is nobody in the Philadelphia market who can't get 94.1. I think we can predict that close to nobody is going to listen on AM.
radioskeptic said:
Of course, they may be cannibalizing the AM audience, because even a good AM signal is going to be at a serious disadvantage in today’s electromagnetic environment.
This is my entire point. For this reason, putting news on 94.1 and 1060 means 1060s numbers approach 0 fairly quickly.
radioskeptic said:
But the classic hits format they “blew up” in the fall of 2008, when they began simulcasting KCBS on FM, wasn’t worth the effort, and I suspect WYSP isn’t either.
WYSP might not be, but a different music (or even younger skewing talk again) format might be. It would draw better total ratings, and perhaps different demos, when combined with what 1060 draws, than a simulcast would.
radioskeptic said:
True, the 97.5 signal – a move-in from Trenton that is now drastically short-spaced to a first-adjacent which is licensed to Millville (but which has its transmitter closer to Atlantic City) – certainly qualifies as an “inferior signal.” But you’re being unrealistic if you think that anybody can take on “B101” and win. Chancellor, and later Clear Channel, tried that with “Alice” and “Star 104.5” without success, long before Greater Media’s effort with their move-in.
Jerry Lee doesn’t answer to any stockholders or Wall Street bankers, and he’s willing to spend whatever it takes on research, billboard and TV advertising and promotion to beat any and all challengers. I certainly don’t hold CBS in very high regard, but I do think they’re smart enough not to take on Jerry. So If you want a new hot AC, dream on.
They don't need to win. They just have to chip away.
The move makes sense if the ratings are better than WYSP's ratings, and the combined ratings of new-AC plus 1060 is better than the combined ratings of a KYW simulcast (or, for that matter, a WIP simulcast).