A few observations. WHAM doing well in a hotly contested election year isn't any surprise...WYSL is also beginning to make some noise in the market as well, although these numbers probably still underreport their true reach. The other main news/talkers in the region, including WXXI-AM, will no doubt do well too, when all is said and done, although the noncomm numbers aren't available yet. (The noncomms only get reported together with the commercial stations in PPM markets, and Western NY probably isn't going to see PPM for a few years yet.)
One sidelight is that Warm 101 is now clearly showing how much it misses the Tony and Dee combination, which can't be reunited for the time being as long as Dee Alexander stays under contract to Entercom. WCMF is also showing now, how much it misses Wease--even though Wease's new show on Fox hasn't had time to get much traction and won't show its true potential for another book or two.
Can't figure any obvious reason why Buzz is falling--or why Drive is doing somewhat better, given that it still sounds pretty mechanical. It is interesting that the most personality-driven music stations, WBEE and WDKX, continue to be strong.
The flip of WROC-AM from Air America to ESPN clearly hurt Hot Talk 1280 while not doing much good for Entercom. The combined share of the two stations only adds up to what WHTK used to draw by itself. And WROC did better on its own running the Air America schedule up to last summer. It also may be no accident that some of the people who liked what they heard on WROC in its old progressive-talk format have apparently migrated up the dial and up the Thruway to KB, which is doing better in the Rochester book than at any time since it turned off its turntables and bid Danny Neaverth farewell.