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Ro On The Radio let go from Star 101.5 KFMD plus potential format change from classic hits.

Plus, if Jon Williams is making 94.9 profitable in the deal he has with Cumulus ratings for 94.9 may be a secondary issue.

I enjoyed KRUZ, it was something different.

I'm wondering what Rox will do with the AM/translator combos. I assume KRRD 1250 feeds 106.1's "Red Dirt" country, but I don't know what's on 1190 or 1390. I seem to recall they had translator CPs with those that haven't been built out.
 
Magic did the light rock/good time oldies for several years in the early 90's. I got to Fayetteville in January 1994, and, shortly after that, it started doing all 70's weekends. Z-98.3 almost immediately launched "Disco Escape Weekends," which was the greatest hits of the 80's all weekend long.

I suspect a lot of the problem with classic hits in NWA is that there really aren't that many signals that cover the entire market. When the frequency allocation table was established, there was really no way of knowing that area was going to explode in population. Even when I was there, the place was booming, but I don't think anyone thought it would be what it is today. More signals cover the entire market, or at least the bulk of it, than did 25 years ago, but that area still has a lot of signals that cover either Fayetteville/Springdale or Bentonville/Rogers but not reliably both areas. Terrain there, especially around Fayetteville, makes a lot of the area signals do worse than they do on paper.

While the area has a lot of 18-34 audience due to the college and a more ethnically diverse audience due to the poultry processing industry, I don't think it has any shortage of potential classic hits ears. In addition to all of the people moving there to do business with Walmart, a lot of my friends from college are still there. I don't know how representative of a percentage of the students at the time that is, but that area had a lot more jobs for us than it did a few years earlier. Those jobs have only grown since. All of them are square in the crosshairs of the classic hits demo. So, the problem wouldn't seem to me to be one of demographics.



That's also a signal that doesn't cover the market very well. It's a C2 that's well outside of town. When I lived there, it was KDAB, which aired a southern gospel format as "Higher Power 94.9." It seemed to really splatter over 94.7 and 95.1 at my apartment, but, as soon as it signed off (which it did at 10:00), KTTS-FM 94.7 and KMXL 95.1 would come booming in. It's really good in Fayetteville, Farmington, and Prairie Grove, but it's pretty mediocre elsewhere. You can get it on a good car radio or home stereo in much of the area, but that's about all that will get it reliably, especially in Rogers and Bentonville. I liked the old "Kruz FM" format 94.9 did about 10 years ago. I'm not really surprised it didn't do very well, though.



Websites are usually low priorities for most operators. I noticed that, too, but I didn't find it that surprising. Hog Radio still has its website as well.



I have no idea, though I wouldn't be surprised if it turns out to be nobody. Cumulus tried oldies once before with Cool 94 and didn't like the results it got. Granted, that was a long time ago, but you usually don't go back to doing something that didn't work before. Plus, classic hits/oldies hasn't worked that well for anybody. Then again, Cumulus has gone back to AC on 94.9 multiple times.
A similar situation happened in the Quad Cities. 104.9 had an adult contemporary format that they dumped for country (later tweaking for classic country, and then regular country again), but it didn't work so Cumulus dumped that for rock (the format used by 98.3 KKEG). That stayed on for 7 years until Townsquare, which bought out the Quad Cities Cumulus cluster, converted it back to country. This too failed so it was dumped again for classic hits in 2016 using the old KIIK 104 brand, which continues to this day. This filled the void left by WYEC, when they "upgraded" their classic hits format to adult hits with the Jack FM brand. Outside of KMXG (which has weekends devoted to classic hits style programming from the 70's-90's) and WQUD (which does a country/oldies hybrid), they are the only full time classic hits/oldies station.
 
I'm wondering what Rox will do with the AM/translator combos. I assume KRRD 1250 feeds 106.1's "Red Dirt" country, but I don't know what's on 1190 or 1390. I seem to recall they had translator CPs with those that haven't been built out.

KRRD 1250 feeds the 106.1 translator. The last time I was in NWA, which was early August 2019, 1390 was also airing the Red Dirt Radio format. A broadcaster friend of mine with ties to that area tells me 1190, 1290, and 1390 are silent.
 
I was in Bentonville at the end of November and 1190 and 1390 were indeed off the air. Also noted their AM site off of Tiger near J seemed to be dismantled.

Thanks for the info. Looks like both 1190 and 1390 have permits to move to a new transmitter site. It appears they'll be diplexing off the same site between Gravette and Bella Vista. Seems to me like a lot of work for a couple of lousy signals, but I'm guessing Rox would’ve tried to buy 1290, too, if it wasn’t intent on making that arrangement work.

The former GM at Hog Radio was a college friend of mine. I still talk to her every once-in-awhile. She tried to buy the stations, but I would guess COVID put a monkey wrench into that. Next time I go back to that area, I'll have to see if she’s willing to get together for lunch and tell me about what’s been going on in radio there over the last 25 years. I've seen the view from 35,000 feet, but that doesn’t really tell you much.
 
RadioInsight and AllAccess are reporting that Rox is selling KRRD 1250 and its translator at 106.1 to KTV Media. As far as I can tell, KTV is what’s left of the old Equity Broadcasting, or at least seems to be a related entity.

That group has the Univision affiliate and the MeTV affiliate for the Fayetteville/Ft. Smith market. I can’t imagine the Red Dirt Radio format is going to last. I suspect KRRD will either be some form of Spanish-language programming or MeTV FM after KTV takes over.

Also, I have to wonder if this deal means Rox will now turn around and buy KUOA 1290. KTV is apparently paying around $300,000 for 1250/106.1. Seems like a high price to me. Rox could probably get KUOA for far less.
 
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