Considering CBS is trying to get out of Cleveland to focus on their larger markets, Akron is a definite no.CleveFan said:I don't think CBS will enter into Akron and Canton as they are concentrating on larger markets. Cumulus maybe, but we shall see if there are other companies interested, but that's if CC is even going to sell stations in those markets.
Tim said:In all seriousness...why would any sane investor want to own music-formatted radio stations in 2012+?
Most music stations are basically juke boxes with spots and sweepers...and there's literally hundreds of thousands of music alternatives on-line....plus MP3 players/music on smart phones, and for the few folks who still have CDs.
And, as much as anything...the consumer who got their music from websites/friends trading files back in the 90's is now as old as 35 or so...and aging every day. These are folks who either not often or rarely listened to radio over the years and probably have carried that habit on to today, as they continue to age.
If it's music a person wants today, why bother turning on the radio? The same-same-same few hundred songs...16-24 minutes of commercials per hour...mindless promos for contests 99% of the population never plays...and little other local, relevant content?
If I owned radio stations in a competitive media market, I'd have huge "FOR SALE" signs everywhere, and hope to find a sucker....or a wealthy, nostalgic person who wants a hobby.
VODood said:The percentage may be the same but the sum is not. Radio may still reach X % but it's not the same total.
Tim said:Ask any radio sales person who has local clients if their radio ad schedules are "working" as well as they did 10 years ago. If they are being honest, in most medium & larger markets the answer is likely "no".
Could it be that listeners now have many other media alternatives, and 6-spot-clusters of sound-alike, screaming, formula commercials, non-stop station and sales-driven promos and dull programming has hurt AQH?
Really, guys...when was the last time you were honestly excited to listen to radio? Everybody I've ever met or worked with in radio...they all mostly privately say the same thing: this is an industry the bean counters have sucked the life and passion out of in order to operate at absolute lowest-cost. They've cheapened the product so much is it any wonder the audience is finding other places to be "entertained"????
Kent said:VODood said:The percentage may be the same but the sum is not. Radio may still reach X % but it's not the same total.
The total listening population is, in fact, larger because the population is higher.
The TSL, on the other hand, is down. It's really not a major issue, though, because TSL has never been a sales metric. The "Jack FM" format was based largely on the concept of driving down TSL to raise cume.
VODood said:National population is larger, yes. Cleveland? No.