Re: 8 country stations in Orlando
Well well, people dare to say that just because some stations were "out-of-market," qualifies as saying that Orlando NEVER had more than 2 country stations. This argument is very much like the ones that say that New York has NO professional football teams, being that the Giants and Jets play in New Jersey. While geographically accurate, most New Yorkers (save for the land surveyors) consider them to be "NEW YORK TEAMS."
Ok, boo-hoo....excuse me if the stations that had strong signals in Orlando were in distant faraway lands like Ocala and Tampa or Daytona Beach. As though these locales couldn't possibly penetrate the Orlando market right? As though the Orlando market frequencies were just too strong for any "out of town" station to penetrate. Gimme a break...you jurisdiction-weirdos should know better than that. Twelve years ago, many signals that broadcasted in the Orlando area originated from outside the city limits.
My claim was not based on radio-directory listings, but what was actually heard ON the radio dial back in the '90s. There was even once a Friday-weekend insert in the Orlando Sentinel called "CALENDAR" that would have a radio listings column, where even the average radio-outsider can see in plain english exactly how many stations per genre broadcasted in the Orlando listening area.
Well well, people dare to say that just because some stations were "out-of-market," qualifies as saying that Orlando NEVER had more than 2 country stations. This argument is very much like the ones that say that New York has NO professional football teams, being that the Giants and Jets play in New Jersey. While geographically accurate, most New Yorkers (save for the land surveyors) consider them to be "NEW YORK TEAMS."
Ok, boo-hoo....excuse me if the stations that had strong signals in Orlando were in distant faraway lands like Ocala and Tampa or Daytona Beach. As though these locales couldn't possibly penetrate the Orlando market right? As though the Orlando market frequencies were just too strong for any "out of town" station to penetrate. Gimme a break...you jurisdiction-weirdos should know better than that. Twelve years ago, many signals that broadcasted in the Orlando area originated from outside the city limits.
My claim was not based on radio-directory listings, but what was actually heard ON the radio dial back in the '90s. There was even once a Friday-weekend insert in the Orlando Sentinel called "CALENDAR" that would have a radio listings column, where even the average radio-outsider can see in plain english exactly how many stations per genre broadcasted in the Orlando listening area.