I just had a long conversation with and he said that the station will be back on the air by October 15. He had a computer failure with the operating software.
I wouldn't mind an expansion of 70's to 80's or even some 90's songs as long as he doesn't lean too much on the songs that are being played into the ground by stations that play classic hits of that era. I hope he doesn't totally leave the 50's and 60's behind. What I like about KFXM is hearing instrumentals, novelty tunes, and a lot of other music from back in the day that doesn't get played elsewhere mixed in with the bigger hits.So frequency 1 is Chris going to go deeper with the playlist. Or is he going back to 50 60 and 70s. Once hes on air
And he doesn't play classic hip hop or classic alternative. I totally agree with you though. Time for fresh coat of 🎨🎨I wouldn't mind an expansion of 70's to 80's or even some 90's songs as long as he doesn't lean too much on the songs that are being played into the ground by stations that play classic hits of that era. I hope he doesn't totally leave the 50's and 60's behind. What I like about KFXM is hearing instrumentals, novelty tunes, and a lot of other music from back in the day that doesn't get played elsewhere mixed in with the bigger hits.
Oh my, that is so sad! Fortunately, the site is archived in the Wayback machine: K F X M The Lost Goldmine in the high desert!The KFXM website is gone replaced by a consulting firm
I hope we don’t lose it either.Ok guys I more day to go. We will see if KFXM is on air. I doubt it though they have no website and no phone number to call
Saying WLNG is synonymous with "Long Island" is an exaggeration. It covers less than 130,000 persons in a market (Nassau / Suffolk MSA) of 3,000,000.I hope we don’t lose it either.
I feel your pain 30james. Like WLNG on Long Island. KFXM is the same here in Los Angeles. Many record collectors and fans (myself included) will be competely devastated if this station disappears from the airwaves.
And the way, a small town station should be programmed. Good ideas 54!!I wouldn't mind an expansion of 70's to 80's or even some 90's songs as long as he doesn't lean too much on the songs that are being played into the ground by stations that play classic hits of that era. I hope he doesn't totally leave the 50's and 60's behind. What I like about KFXM is hearing instrumentals, novelty tunes, and a lot of other music from back in the day that doesn't get played elsewhere mixed in with the bigger hits.
KFXM is a high desert station, so bringing up it's "listener potential" in a highly unreachable population of 13.7 million is futile. 13.7 million (- the 18,000) in the LA basin west of the mountains who cannot even tune in. So really, 18 thousand potential listeners and how many of those are tuning in?? And for those tuning in, a wonderful, full and complete cycle of classic hits covering several decades. It's either that (which many prefer) or hearing the same daily 80s monotony of K-Earth 101, if they can even hear it on the eastern side of the San Gabriels. KFXM is a very good station, comparable to the ones I listen in Florida and I hope they continue spewing out the great music. Being over 55 does have it's advantages!Saying WLNG is synonymous with "Long Island" is an exaggeration. It covers less than 130,000 persons in a market (Nassau / Suffolk MSA) of 3,000,000.
Similarly, KFXM covers 18,000 in a market of 13,700,000.
Yes, they have streams, but that costs them extra money and is not viable outside the immediate area of coverage.
The whole issue here is that we don't know if the licensee is both willing and able to continue sustaining the operation of this station. While it lasted a "good long time" people get older, volunteers drop out and don't get replaced and the format itself appeals to fewer and fewer remaining people.KFXM is a very good station, comparable to the ones I listen in Florida and I hope they continue spewing out the great music.
18 K is the population of Rosamond. You can hear KFXM in Lancaster and Palmdale on any car radio.KFXM is a high desert station, so bringing up it's "listener potential" in a highly unreachable population of 13.7 million is futile. 13.7 million (- the 18,000) in the LA basin west of the mountains who cannot even tune in. So really, 18 thousand potential listeners and how many of those are tuning in?? And for those tuning in, a wonderful, full and complete cycle of classic hits covering several decades. It's either that (which many prefer) or hearing the same daily 80s monotony of K-Earth 101, if they can even hear it on the eastern side of the San Gabriels. KFXM is a very good station, comparable to the ones I listen in Florida and I hope they continue spewing out the great music. Being over 55 does have it's advantages!
18 k is the population of the 60 dbu coverage area.18 K is the population of Rosamond. You can hear KFXM in Lancaster and Palmdale on any car radio.
Based on the Spring Akron numbers, the station is 14th in 25-544, it's strongest demo. 22nd in 12+. It does about 65% better in men than women, too. It is very bobbly in the 12+ numbers, having gone as high as 1.9 in Fall of 2020 and as low as 0.5 in Fall of 2021. In real numbers, that's a cume iv about 22,000 and AQH persons of 800.The" Sunday Oldies Jukebox" in the Akron area, 88.9 WSTB [when I started listening to it] played 50s/60s/70s. Now they've started adding some 80s into the mix. Listener supported station that does extremely well. I heard at one point, before iheart wrecked WMJI [in my opinion], that they had 3 times as many listeners as Majic. And they did this only putting out 680 watts. They don't subscribe to Nielsen.