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Rumor Mill: WROC-AM Dumping Progressive Talk?

Old cars and AM radio are a great combination. Somehow they hit the same emotional section of the radio-person brain.

Yep, you've got it Bob1370 - the straight-8 128 hp Commodore with splash lubrication. Also has OD and selective freewheeling - about 60% of an automatic transmission in actual practice, with the proper footwork and voodoo. Just 3-speed and OD, not the Hudson semi-automatics DriveMaster or SuperMatic.

It's an incredible car which lives up to all the Hudson legends you've heard. I bought it sight-unseen from a guy who had it in Hemmings, back 12 years or so ago, and off the trailer from Gallipolis, OH, in 9-degree January weather it started the minute I pushed the button. It was "barn-fresh" in collector-car parlance - meaning it had mice in the headliner and squirrels had stuffed the glove compartment with chestnuts. But it was solid, complete, Bondo-free and a great runner, so I restored it over about 5 years.

Every spring I put the battery charger on it for about 20 minutes, prime the fuel system with an installed aftermarket 6VDC fuel pump for about ten seconds, and it starts and purrs every time - after slumbering in storage for 6 months. Amazing for a 58 year old car. Gutted the old tube-type radio (with its 14-amp, no typo, that's a FOURTEEN-amp in-line fuse!!!) and had it refitted with AM-FM stereo 25-watt dual outputs that still cosmetically looks just the same.
 
Okay, here is the promised-long-ago rationale behind the "neocon" (someone else's description) programming on WYSL, stemming from the discussion here a week or so ago. First I'd like to say two things: thanks for the supportive and respectful general comments about WYSL. And I fully understand that many posters here do not agree politically with the viewpoints of certain hosts broadcast on our station. That's fine and I respect your convictions.

I note the disparagement of O'Reilly, Ingraham and Quinn and Rose - and somebody blasted Dennis Miller too. I hear many of you would like WYSL to add Schultz and Stephanie Miller, among other changes.

We selected the programs we did for WYSL because they are the most viable shows according to available national data. Laura Ingraham has almost 500 affiliates and its the fifth-biggest show in the format, ranking behind Rush, Hannity, Savage and Dr. Laura in that order. She has a weekly national Arbitron cume exceeding 5 million, as compared with Rush's 13.5 million (Talkers Mag citing Arbitron at the time we affiliated.) Laura has grown considerably since then. Nationally she's considerably bigger than Glenn Beck who's tied for 6th place with Neil Boortz and Mike Gallagher.

O'Reilly is tied for 7th (more than 400 affiliates) with Jim Bohannon (which we also recently added to the lineup), Clark Howard and Mark Levin, each with 3.25 million weekly cume. Dennis Miller is too new so I don't have national numbers for him. Same deal for Quinn and Rose, but I personally know and like Jim Quinn, having had him as my morning guy on 13Q Pittsburgh. I think he's very funny and very smart. We added him last fall to morning drive at the request of some WYSL listeners, and it's been a fantastic addition IMHO, judging from listener and client response. (Somebody also took a shot at his past personal life here and suggested he had morphed into a cynical "neocon" moralist. Setting aside the obvious truism that request-line nubile-listener adventures could haunt almost any one of us, I assure everyone here that Quinn's observations on pop culture, religion, politics and the state of the US are sincere ones. In any event let's not villainize the guy for showing personal growth over the years.)

Compare this with some of the liberal talkers. Ed Schultz has a weekly cume of 3 million and is in a 6-way tie for 8th place, with Stephanie Miller coming in at 1.25 million in a 7-way horse race at unlucky 13th place with Alan Colmes, Al Franken, Randi Rhodes (RIP) and others. There isn't any comparison in terms of track records, stability of affiliation or audience size. Schultz is the only liberal talker among 24 hosts ranked in the top ten.

I don't think WYSL represents "more of the same" any more than competing TV stations offer merely "more of the same" when they schedule competing 6pm and 11pm newscasts against the local number-one TV station, or when WAXC challenged WBBF for top 40 supremacy. Not everybody likes Rush or Beck or Lonsberry. WYSL offers a competing product and a choice for listeners. Judging from the station's overall 40% revenue growth since AP dumped all-news in 2005, the metamorphasis to talk has been a great thing for the station.

Augmented with our local talker Bill Nojay, now syndicated regionally to seven stations (with three more affiliates ready to go) the WYSL formula is working quite well. In any case I don't think it's fair or accurate to characterize Ingraham, O'Reilly, Dennis Miller and Quinn as has-been/also-ran/third-rate products.
 
Mr Savage:
I am very happy to read that your station has experienced a 40% growth in revenue since the demise of AP's All News Network. Naturally your station had to find programs to replace AP and by no means am I attempting to program your station for you. I just happen to be a "news junkie" and I enjoyed listening to WYSL's all-news format during my numerous business trips across New York State; especially Western New York. As I mentioned in my previous post, I enjoy Bill Nojay's show because it's local and deals with issues that impact me. Please accept my sincerest best wishes for future success.
 
I know this string is all about audience numbers, but as a listener I find it frustrating that the concern about WROC is centered entirely on what format change would boost its ratings; the soon-to-be-abandoned liberal/progressive talk listeners are apparently of zero concern. Given that a small but dedicated group of us listen for several hours a day despite the poor signal, the static, the frequent technical glitches and the non-existent promotion, and given that Monroe County is more or less evenly divided politically, I cannot fathom the reluctance of local broadcasters to not only carry progressive talk but actively promote it as if they were actually interested in building an audience. The last time I saw WROC represented at any of the local festivals like Corn Hill, Park Avenue and numerous suburban events, it was still carrying conservative talk. I can drive through Chicago on I-94 and see several billboards promoting WCPT 820. If WROC bought billboard space featuring Ed Schultz and Rachel Maddow, viewers who see them regularly on cable news networks would become aware that they are on AM 950.

With a halfway decent effort building a liberal-talk audience, WROC’s numbers could improve beyond expectations for such a weak station. If not WROC, some other station should step up to the plate and seek us out. Incidentally, I wonder how the talk personalities’ ratings would fare if they were expressed in some such unit as listeners per kW.

As for Mr. Savage’s comment that “WYSL offers a competing product and a choice for listeners” – perhaps so, but it’s like the difference between French Vanilla and Vanilla, or like the choice that voters in Iran are offered at election time. That said, I would MUCH prefer that local ownership like his were the norm rather than the rare exception, and I hope that sometime soon ownership and licensing rules will be re-enacted to favor this. I also hope that next time Mr. Savage contemplates programming changes, he will sincerely consider some left-of-center voices.

We listeners are the ones that support you broadcasters, and if you don’t serve our disparate interests, those of us left out in the cold will make the effort to find others who do, as we increasingly have the means to do. Though I much prefer the convenience of tuning in to local stations on an AM-FM radio, a WiFi radio receiver is looking very good right now. Once the habit is broken, it may be hard to restore. Don’t say you weren’t warned.
 
Actually, sir, not to be argumentative, but as a station owner who has to meet payroll, mortgage payments and pay property taxes and utility bills, listeners do NOT support radio stations. Advertisers do. Perhaps if more listeners to WROC took the time to phone or drop in to the station's advertisers, buy stuff and tell those clients how much they appreciate their support of the liberal/progressive format, Entercom could have seen their way clear to keep it on the air.

I had the same experience with the Cleveland Browns, with whom we were affiliated for about 8 years. After the initial euphoria about the new franchise wore off, the sponsors all wandered away, leaving us with a big Clear Channel bill to pay. I appealed to the THREE (count 'em) local chapters of the Browns-Backers fan club. I told them: no sponsor support, no Browns on WYSL. I got earnest e-mails urging us to hang on. I appealed to them to get out there, make some calls, and help us find some advertisers, even concocting a little ad package for them to give to prospects. Then: nothing. Zip. Nada. When we didn't renew, you should have heard the nasty calls.

As far as the suggestion that every radio licensee should have to actively defend its license in the form of a re-application every three years: forget it. 90% of operators, including yours truly, would walk. The effect of what you are proposing would be precisely the opposite of what you say you want: more local ownership and involvement. In fact, that would drive most guys like me to go into running riding stables or bowling alleys instead of local radio. Result: more concentration of radio ownership in the hands of big self-perpetuating, self-interested private or public bureaucracies. Actually, if you look at it, the reason we have the mess we have today is due to government malfeasance dating to 1996. Government, not private enterprise, is what screwed up radio (by creating an environment where screwing it up was almost inevitable.)
 
listener-in said:
I know this string is all about audience numbers, but as a listener I find it frustrating that the concern about WROC is centered entirely on what format change would boost its ratings; the soon-to-be-abandoned liberal/progressive talk listeners are apparently of zero concern.

Though I much prefer the convenience of tuning in to local stations on an AM-FM radio, a WiFi radio receiver is looking very good right now. Once the habit is broken, it may be hard to restore. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

The thing is this format change WILL NOT boost WROC's ratings. The ratings, abysmal as they are now, will go down even further. So boosting ratings is the not the reason behind this change! So, what's the explanation? Maybe Entercom doesn't want to be associated with progressive talk anymore (though they are in Buffalo with WWKB). Maybe Entercom wants a more reliable network to minimize the technical glitches, so they don't have to worry about it. But this isn't a move that will boost the station's ratings.

The only thing that would work from a ratings perspective is if Entercom decided to simulcast portions of WGR on WROC. Given the interest in the Bills and Sabres in the Rochester area, putting on Howard Simon and Schopp and the Bulldog could attract an audience. On the other hand, WGR already comes in very strong in Rochester during daylight hours. And all indications point to Entercom simply going with ESPN Radio, which will have minimal appeal.

But "Listener-in" does bring up a valid point, radio managers. There was a segment of the audience that found value in progressive talk. Now that such programming is being taken away, there's another reason for people to stop listening to the radio. And that, my friends, is to our peril.
 
Philip_Airtime said:
The thing is this format change WILL NOT boost WROC's ratings. The ratings, abysmal as they are now, will go down even further. So boosting ratings is the not the reason behind this change! So, what's the explanation? Maybe Entercom doesn't want to be associated with progressive talk anymore (though they are in Buffalo with WWKB). Maybe Entercom wants a more reliable network to minimize the technical glitches, so they don't have to worry about it. But this isn't a move that will boost the station's ratings.

Short but sweet: Entercom can likely make more money with a sports format than they would with talk radio.
 
Savage said:
Dennis Miller is too new so I don't have national numbers for him. Same deal for Quinn and Rose, but I personally know and like Jim Quinn, having had him as my morning guy on 13Q Pittsburgh. I think he's very funny and very smart. We added him last fall to morning drive at the request of some WYSL listeners, and it's been a fantastic addition IMHO, judging from listener and client response...

In any case I don't think it's fair or accurate to characterize Ingraham, O'Reilly, Dennis Miller and Quinn as has-been/also-ran/third-rate products.

Thank you for the explanation and a little "behind the scenes", it was a great read.

With that said:

Why then, did you decide to go with Dennis, despite his "new" status? Is it the name recognition? How much are you being paid to carry his show?

And can you put an estimate on the number of "some WYSL listeners" that requested Quinn & Rose? If we can show you double that number requesting to carry Steph or Schultz, would you go for it?
 
Bob Savage replied recently to queries about his programming schedule on WYSL, "Okay, here is the promised-long-ago rationale behind the "neocon" (someone else's description) programming on WYSL, stemming from the discussion here a week or so ago."

I don't know if I'd call the WYSL lineup neocon myself, they strike me more as Reagan-style small-government conservatives of a more traditional variety, while Beck, Savage and (to a degree) Limbaugh over on WHAM are more firmly in the neo-con realm.

My question is this...since WYSL's primary coverage and sales area takes in the outer counties and outer-ring 'burbs of the metro with high GOP registration bases, isn't this basically programming designed to appeal to the expected potential 35-64 audience within its target area, and its preferences?

Wouldn't an essentially Monroe County-centered station, where Democrats slightly outnumber Republicans these days, have to do it a little differently? Wouldn't it have to reflect that ideological split in its programming the way WBEN does in Erie County when it starts with traditional labor Democrat John Zach in the morning, follows with Bauerle and Limbaugh on the right in middays, then maverick center-right iconoclast Sandy Beach in afternoons, and finally center-left Ron Dobson at night?
 
I worked at 950 (then WBBF) for two stints, 75-77 as PD and 85-86 as morning drive news/talk host/anchor. I can tell you: there is NO format or programming approach which is going to get that 1kw highly directional signal any competitive ratings. The best you can hope for is a saleable format with which you can make money. Tactically it makes even more sense if you can select a format which will notch some share away from a direct competitor at the same time, however incremental that might be.

D2TJ, it doesn't work that way. Petitions and letter-writing don't convince station management to add specific programs. If you were to stop by and drop on my desk $300,000 worth of non-cancellable advertising commitments from solid clients, ready to start sending checks the minute we add Stephanie Miller, THAT would get favorable attention. Besides, we have commitments to the shows which are currently on the air. And as noted earlier, the current lineup is working for us so there is no incentive to make changes.

If we ultimately get 1220 we could take a look at left-talk at that point for the second signal. Assuming left-talk is still around then.
 
Savage said:
Assuming left-talk is still around then.


These are the opinions expressed by WYSL management, not necessarily those of the NAB, NABET, AFTRA, Career Academy, Columbia School of Broadcasting (no relation) or other interested parties. Characters are entirely fictional and do not in any way represent actual humanoids living or dead.
 
I'm sure Entercom GM Mike Doyle must have figured that when word got out WROC will changed to ESPN sports that WHTK would very likely counter program with their own sports format(as they now are).

Question to those more in the know about this than I: As stations sometimes get a small cut of each network spot than runs, perhaps this is why Doyle is calculating that ESPN will bring in more income for WROC than it's present progressive talk lineup? Bob Savage is, of course, correct. There is absolutely no way any format on low power, highly directional AM 950 in Rochester is going to get any ratings. When they dropped "AM Only" 8 years back, that was the end of 2 and 3 shares(upper end demos yes, but actual people listening).
 
"Bob Savage is, of course, correct. There is absolutely no way any format on low power, highly directional AM 950 in Rochester is going to get any ratings."

He is absolutely right, when we're talking about English language formats.

Of course, if WROC went Latino, with local morning and afternoon drive hosts and good syndicated stuff the rest of the day (along with more than a token local news effort) they'd find the station generated a healthy 50,000 weekly cume and a 2 or 3 share from a near-monopoly of Spanish-speaking listeners in the market. And since you're talking about doing it with a small core staff, you'd serve that audience without a big cost, and generate some significant cash flow for a station that couldn't do it with an English language format of any kind.

Why do I say that? Two reasons; no likely FM format competition for many years, and almost all the potential listeners live within the constricted 5 mV contour of WROC-AM, so that godawful pattern is no longer a big problem with such a format. And if they do it, they really will have a format monopoly for many years, because the critical mass to support one fulltime Spanish station profitably has now arrived, but it'll be decades before a second one on either AM or FM would be viable.

I doubt Entercom will do it, because they still would have to hire a FEW people specifically for it (a couple of fulltime hosts, a couple parttimers, a couple news people, a salesman, an office manager) and spend a little money initially to let people know it's there. But if they don't, someone will--maybe Stephens will do it with one of the Class A FMs they bought along with Warm 101. Then the window of opportunity will have closed. Entercom then could just as easily give 950 away, or shut it down and sell off the land as development property, perhaps getting money from CBS and Regent in the process because it would allow them to spread the patterns of co-channel WWJ and WIBX respectively.
 
Bob1370 said:
"Bob Savage is, of course, correct. There is absolutely no way any format on low power, highly directional AM 950 in Rochester is going to get any ratings."
He is absolutely right, when we're talking about English language formats.

???

So in other words Bob you are saying that WROC's poor signal pattern won't impact people who speak Spanish, but it does impact those of us who only speak English?

This 950 thing is a moot point. The decision has already been made to air sports.

If you want a Spanish station in Rochester, why not suggest to your management to use one of their HD subchannels to broadcast such a format or change WRUR's format to Hispanic.
 
"So in other words Bob you are saying that WROC's poor signal pattern won't impact people who speak Spanish, but it does impact those of us who only speak English?

No, I'm simply saying that it's the one group of demo cells that currently lives almost all within WROC's 5 mV contour and can be reliably reached with it to deliver a 50,000 cume and 2 to 3 share, thus operating profitably. Any other target audience is now too spread out for that signal to effectively reach it.

This is a window of opportunity that'll give that station another decade of viability before its target demos join the dispersal of population that's become characteristic of the region.

If they don't do it, Entercom's better off just taking a payoff from WWJ and WIBX to take it dark (allowing them to spread their night patterns), and then selling off some prime land along Clinton Avenue South--the tower site--at a premium price for someone to develop. 950 will eventually meet this fate no matter what format it chooses. But going after and superserving the Latino audience, which is growing and geographically concentrated at the same time (like Rochester itself was back when 950 came online 61 years ago), buys WROC another decade before the Latino audience spreads out geographically and an FM flips format to reach it.

This is a demographic group that deserves its own fulltime station, and 950 can fill that niche now.

I hate to see a once-great signal go dark. But it's hard to see any way it can be made viable unless they go after and superserve a growing population that's overdue for its own station and lives within that constricted contour.
 
Bob1370 said:
"So in other words Bob you are saying that WROC's poor signal pattern won't impact people who speak Spanish, but it does impact those of us who only speak English?

No, I'm simply saying that it's the one group of demo cells that currently lives almost all within WROC's 5 mV contour and can be reliably reached with it to deliver a 50,000 cume and 2 to 3 share, thus operating profitably. Any other target audience is now too spread out for that signal to effectively reach it.

This is a window of opportunity that'll give that station another decade of viability before its target demos join the dispersal of population that's become characteristic of the region.

If they don't do it, Entercom's better off just taking a payoff from WWJ and WIBX to take it dark (allowing them to spread their night patterns), and then selling off some prime land along Clinton Avenue South--the tower site--at a premium price for someone to develop. 950 will eventually meet this fate no matter what format it chooses. But going after and superserving the Latino audience, which is growing and geographically concentrated at the same time (like Rochester itself was back when 950 came online 61 years ago), buys WROC another decade before the Latino audience spreads out geographically and an FM flips format to reach it.

This is a demographic group that deserves its own fulltime station, and 950 can fill that niche now.

I hate to see a once-great signal go dark. But it's hard to see any way it can be made viable unless they go after and superserve a growing population that's overdue for its own station and lives within that constricted contour.

Again this is a moot point. Entercom has decided to go with sports as a format on 950 AM. Whether that format will be successful or not, only time will tell.

My suggestion would be for some influential business leaders in the Hispanic community to pool their resources and either purchase a radio station from one of the clusters, or take a page from Andrew Langston's play book and build a station from the ground up, like Langston did with WDKX.

It's the old adage; "Show me the Money!" If these business leaders could come up with either cash, or financial backing from a lending institution, it wouldn't be impossible for say Stephens Media , Crawford, or even the two big conglomerates in Rochester to sell off one of their less-profitable radio stations to such a group.
 
"My suggestion would be for some influential business leaders in the Hispanic community to pool their resources and either purchase a radio station from one of the clusters, or take a page from Andrew Langston's play book and build a station from the ground up, like Langston did with WDKX."

Mark, I wouldn't be surprised if this happens in the next few years.

There's no slot open on the FM dial that could accommodate at least a class A (3 to 6 kW ERP) signal at this stage (believe me, we've tried to find one). An LPFM won't have enough reach and signal strength to get the job done even with an overwhelmingly city-based population and can't be run as a commercial venture under current rules anyway. So building any kind of FM station is out. MAYBE there's another AM channel that could be squeezed in. Hey, Bob Savage found a way to squeeze in another fulltime 2500 watt station into the area a few clicks above WHAM on the dial, and it'll be up and running within 18 months, so if he can do it, someone else might as well. But as I'm sure Bob can tell you after building out one 20 KW AM station and now working on building out that second one, it's going to be costly in terms of land for the towers in a location close enough to put a 5 mV signal over the city.

So acquiring an existing FM probably gives any newcomer the best bang for the buck. I have to bet that Stephens might be open to unloading one of its lower-power FMs in the near future, so 93.3 or 94.1 might be a candidate...unless they decide to flip one of them to a Latino format themselves, beating everyone to the punch, which also would not shock me.
 
Savage said:
We selected the programs we did for WYSL because they are the most viable shows according to available national data. Laura Ingraham has almost 500 affiliates and its the fifth-biggest show in the format, ranking behind Rush, Hannity, Savage and Dr. Laura in that order. She has a weekly national Arbitron cume exceeding 5 million, as compared with Rush's 13.5 million (Talkers Mag citing Arbitron at the time we affiliated.) Laura has grown considerably since then. Nationally she's considerably bigger than Glenn Beck who's tied for 6th place with Neil Boortz and Mike Gallagher.

I don't pay much attention to station affiliation because there are a ton of me-too conservative talk stations out there in every market, usually with one dominant talker and then another station doing much worse with the leftovers. Audience numbers are important, but let's also consider the number of stations airing each show and look at the average number of listeners per station. Using your numbers, let's compare Stephanie Miller with Laura Ingraham and Bill O'Reilly with Ed Schultz:

Laura Ingraham On just under 500 stations (let's use 475) and have 5,000,000 listeners. That equals an average of 10526 listeners per station.
Stephanie Miller On just about 60 stations and has 1,250,000 listeners. That equals an average of 20833 listeners per station.

Bill O'Reilly On more than 400 stations (let's use 400) and has 3,250,000 listeners. That equals an average of 8125 listeners per station.
Ed Schultz On about 93 stations (according to their website) and has 3,000,000 listeners. That equals an average of 32258 listeners per station.

I'm not sure how the math of choosing more conservative talk, which nets the average station fewer listeners than the two Jones talkers is a winning formula. Radio Moscow used to broadcast on 19 frequencies at the same time to saturate the airwaves too, but that never meant it was the most listened to radio station on the dial. If either liberal show was on 400-500 stations, they'd be doing great, but there remains a reflexive "concern" about libtalk as a format even when the numbers tell a fascinatingly different story. Of course, radio stations like WROC running the format will be stuck towards the bottom of the heap no matter what they run on the station. But that's not because of the programming - it's the fancy free "who cares" attitude of Entercom management that frankly ignores the station, has never promoted it, and obviously isn't even aware of technical faults unless listeners call and complain. I guarantee more of the same with sports talk.

Dennis Miller is too new so I don't have national numbers for him. Same deal for Quinn and Rose, but I personally know and like Jim Quinn, having had him as my morning guy on 13Q Pittsburgh. I think he's very funny and very smart.

But you put his show on your station anyway, when there are clear indications that Dennis Miller is much more likely to be somewhere in the Jerry Doyle neighborhood of conservative talk and not in the same ballpark where shows like Ed Schultz have done better. And Jim Quinn is fine to add because you think he's funny and smart, but Miller either isn't in your view, or you want to use a different standard when considering whether a show like hers has a place on your station.

This is precisely the kind of thinking I find common among radio execs that are comfortable with more of the same. Let's be honest, however. Let's admit this is more about your personal judgment and bias going into programming decisions and less about any scientific approach, because you have to fix the facts around the narrative to make the latter argument work.

Compare this with some of the liberal talkers. Ed Schultz has a weekly cume of 3 million and is in a 6-way tie for 8th place, with Stephanie Miller coming in at 1.25 million in a 7-way horse race at unlucky 13th place with Alan Colmes, Al Franken, Randi Rhodes (RIP) and others. There isn't any comparison in terms of track records, stability of affiliation or audience size. Schultz is the only liberal talker among 24 hosts ranked in the top ten.

Again, you seem to be using different standards. You added Dennis Miller but he has absolutely no track record whatsoever, while Schultz actually does. And most of the track record you refer to extends to far less than a decade for most of these hosts (O'Reilly 2002, Levin about a year, etc.) What is different is a handful of distributors pack more of these hosts on the satellite to deliver to stations, a good number of them small rural outlets serving tiny audiences.

I don't think WYSL represents "more of the same" any more than competing TV stations offer merely "more of the same" when they schedule competing 6pm and 11pm newscasts against the local number-one TV station, or when WAXC challenged WBBF for top 40 supremacy. Not everybody likes Rush or Beck or Lonsberry. WYSL offers a competing product and a choice for listeners. Judging from the station's overall 40% revenue growth since AP dumped all-news in 2005, the metamorphasis to talk has been a great thing for the station.

There is no comparison between an unbiased newscast and opinion talk radio. Conservatives and liberals can, and do watch WHAM-TV news in equal numbers. Liberals may listen to conservative talk radio for the occasional curiousity factor, but there is no doubt that the primary listeners to that kind of opinion talk are the "amen corner."

I made the reference to the secondary conservative talk station is a market being more of the same, because that is exactly what it is. Your ratings will plateau just as they have in most other markets with a second conservative talk station because the majority of listeners will be tuned to the primary conservative talker, which will also pick off any breakout show that does seem to be doing particularly well for the second tier station. That was exactly what happened when Rush Limbaugh disappeared from WYSL and went to WHAM. If there is a tear in the fabric of space, and Dennis Miller becomes a mega radio star, he won't be on WYSL for long. Neither will Bill Nojay if his career takes off and draws significant numbers. Meanwhile, you end up ignoring a considerable underserved audience altogether which could be yours for the taking. Why ignore it?

Augmented with our local talker Bill Nojay, now syndicated regionally to seven stations (with three more affiliates ready to go) the WYSL formula is working quite well. In any case I don't think it's fair or accurate to characterize Ingraham, O'Reilly, Dennis Miller and Quinn as has-been/also-ran/third-rate products.

I think when you really drill down into the numbers, review their daily show topics and talking points, and the history of what stations typically carry these hosts (excluding Quinn who I have never heard or heard of before), I think it's absolutely an apt description of all three. If there was a clamoring for any of them in significant numbers, they would be running on WHAM and not WYSL. That's why I encourage you to expand your horizon beyond finding comfort in the second tier conservative talk format. If you're willing to give a washed up comic like Dennis Miller a shot, why not an Ed Schultz who has a proven track record and audience that Miller doesn't have?
 
Simple Answer?

Perhaps Mr. Savage is of a Conservative nature, judges his audience to be of a Conservative nature, and has decided to do has he damn well pleases. As the owner, that's his prerogative.

Find yourself some backers, buy either a station or some brokered airtime, and risk your own money. It's that simple. Then you can program whatever you want.
 
Phillip, I find your assessment of our motives and means by which we program our station somewhat harsh. Of course nobody applies the arithmetic formula you used, dividing national cume by number of affiliates. We took a look at the available programming to make our decisions- at the time, recall WROC had many of the programs you are thumping for already under contract, so they weren't available to us even if we had wanted it then. You're looking at some ideology-based approach as opposed to the realities of running a business in a very tough environment, with, I will add, an unfortunate lack of respect expressed in your attitude.

It's interesting you use the term "bias" in referring to our programming, presumably because you don't agree with the political content. One assumes you wouldn't see this as "bias" so long as you agreed with the politics, as in, Stephanie Miller, Schultz or other left-leaning talkers.

Your comments to the effect that if WYSL were ever to attract any programming of merit it would immediately leave our station is mean-spirited. You have no idea how successful the station is.

If you're trying to persuade me to see your point of view, this isn't the way to "win friends and influence people." You're sounding more like a lefty-zealot crank in this post. If you don't like our programming just don't listen. Or as Sir Rox says, go raise the capital, put your own stick on the air and your butt on the line.
 
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