• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

SBS Buys KROI for $7.5 million

SBS also gets a nice new transmitter facility. Do they run any HD subchannels in their other markets? (92.1 has been in HD since the new transmitter launch, but only with HD-1.)
They run HD2 on WCMQ, but that is mainly to feed their 106.3 translator in Miami, which makes up for the poor signal of WRAZ on the same channel, which broadcasts from near the Keys.

Same with WIOB-HD2, which feeds the West Coast translators of WRXD in Puerto Rico.
 
Can 92.1 really compete with 102.9 if it does become Regional Mexican? Last time it tried to compete against an established station (against KRBE as Radio Now 92.1), it failed miserably.
 
Can 92.1 really compete with 102.9 if it does become Regional Mexican? Last time it tried to compete against an established station (against KRBE as Radio Now 92.1), it failed miserably.
I believe KLTN was Estereo Latino back when KROI was La Mera Mera.

In my opinion La Mera Mera did more harm to itself than help itself when it kept throwing stones to KLTN.

KLTN has always had the saying SUPER JUEVES.

KROI would throw jabs at KLTN saying, here everyday is Super, Super Friday, super Saturday, super Sunday, super Monday, Super Tuesday, super Wednesday. Super t, and also throw jabs at 106.5.

To me it seems liked they were always reminding people to listen to the other stations instead of there’s.


SBS should know a little better than that.
 
Tropical in Houston?
We're you just being funny?
Am I missing something?
Feels like doing Country Legends on an Empire signal in NYC.
Tucker Carlson becoming a tenor Berkeley professor with a show on KPFA/NPR.
 
Tropical in Houston?
We're you just being funny?
Not funny. Not at all. There are multiple Mexican tropical stations in Monterrey (and elsewhere in Mexico). They play cumbia and vallenato and cumbia norteña, mostly by Mexican artists.
Am I missing something?
Feels like doing Country Legends on an Empire signal in NYC.
Tucker Carlson becoming a tenor Berkeley professor with a show on KPFA/NPR.
Every region of Latin America has its own "tropical" music and formats...

Cumbia Villera in Argentina and Uruguay and Paraguay. Tecnocumbia in Chile and Perú. Cumbia, Vallenato and salsa in Colombia Cumbia and salsa in Venzuela and Ecuador. Central American cumbia in El Salvador and neighboring nations. Salsa in Puerto Rico, New York and Cuba. Merengue in the Dominican Republic.
 
Tropical in Houston?
We're you just being funny?
Am I missing something?
Feels like doing Country Legends on an Empire signal in NYC.
Tucker Carlson becoming a tenor Berkeley professor with a show on KPFA/NPR.
Nope. I literally don’t know anything about the potential viability of the tropical format in Houston. I just know that SBS does tropical formats on some of its stations, that we don’t have a tropical station, and figured maybe there’s room. But it sounds like it might not work out here.
 
Nope. I literally don’t know anything about the potential viability of the tropical format in Houston. I just know that SBS does tropical formats on some of its stations, that we don’t have a tropical station, and figured maybe there’s room. But it sounds like it might not work out here.
In each case where SBS does a tropical format, it is different.

  • In Puerto Rico, they bought WZNT, Z-93, the world's first all-salsa FM which began in December, 1978. They did not create that format... I did.
  • In Miami, they do their own version of a Cuban / Caribbean salsa and rhythmic format
  • In New York, they do a merengue / salsa / bachata and rhythmic format that targest Dominicans and was modeled after Z-101 in Santo Domingo (again, a format I originated in the 80's).
If they did a tropical format for Houston, it would have to be a "Monterrey" tropical format with cumbia and vallenato in Mexican style. They have not done this before. And it is a more niche format for a market that is primarily of Mexican origin.

If I were guessing, it is going to be regional Mexican with a more-music focus since KLTN is very talk heavy and the two regional stations have very inadequate signals even compared to what SBS bought.
 
In each case where SBS does a tropical format, it is different.

  • In Puerto Rico, they bought WZNT, Z-93, the world's first all-salsa FM which began in December, 1978. They did not create that format... I did.
  • In Miami, they do their own version of a Cuban / Caribbean salsa and rhythmic format
  • In New York, they do a merengue / salsa / bachata and rhythmic format that targest Dominicans and was modeled after Z-101 in Santo Domingo (again, a format I originated in the 80's).
If they did a tropical format for Houston, it would have to be a "Monterrey" tropical format with cumbia and vallenato in Mexican style. They have not done this before. And it is a more niche format for a market that is primarily of Mexican origin.

If I were guessing, it is going to be regional Mexican with a more-music focus since KLTN is very talk heavy and the two regional stations have very inadequate signals even compared to what SBS bought.
And yet this isn’t Mexico, it’s Houston. Not everything translates well, especially if the radio landscape is probably cluttered with too many similar programming choices in this segment already.
 
With Mega and La Raza taken in Houston, that seems to leave La Ley. Or SBS comes up with something bright and shiny. Either way, I definitely see a fourth station for "El Terrible" and his morning show.
 
In each case where SBS does a tropical format, it is different.

  • In Puerto Rico, they bought WZNT, Z-93, the world's first all-salsa FM which began in December, 1978. They did not create that format... I did.
  • In Miami, they do their own version of a Cuban / Caribbean salsa and rhythmic format
  • In New York, they do a merengue / salsa / bachata and rhythmic format that targest Dominicans and was modeled after Z-101 in Santo Domingo (again, a format I originated in the 80's).
If they did a tropical format for Houston, it would have to be a "Monterrey" tropical format with cumbia and vallenato in Mexican style. They have not done this before. And it is a more niche format for a market that is primarily of Mexican origin.

If I were guessing, it is going to be regional Mexican with a more-music focus since KLTN is very talk heavy and the two regional stations have very inadequate signals even compared to what SBS bought.
Why did KROI’s first try at Regional Mexican fail? I was a little boy when they were La Mera Mera and never listened to it, so I’m curious why exactly things went wrong.
 
Why did KROI’s first try at Regional Mexican fail? I was a little boy when they were La Mera Mera and never listened to it, so I’m curious why exactly things went wrong.
Mostly internal issues with lack of management support at the local level, and considerable "rivalry" with the existing staff. that made the on-air work less enthusiastic and the staff turned over considerably.
 
With Mega and La Raza taken in Houston, that seems to leave La Ley. Or SBS comes up with something bright and shiny. Either way, I definitely see a fourth station for "El Terrible" and his morning show.
El Terrible is also syndicated to other cities such as Vegas, San Diego, Denver, and Memphis, although those are not SBS O&Os.
 
Does anyone think SBS would be interested in having an HD2 for a downtown translator?
 
Does anyone think SBS would be interested in having an HD2 for a downtown translator?
SBS until now, has only used translators to compensate for coverage.

103.1 in Ponce, PR which rebroadcasts WODA and WNOD's urban format.
106.3 in Miami, which rebroadcasts WRAZ's salsa format from down in the keys, as well as WCMQ HD2.
95.5 and 94.5 in the West Coasts of Puerto Rico, which rebroadcasts WRXD's Gold AC format, and also airs on WIOB HD2. Honestly I would be surprised if SBS didn't use their new cash reserves to buy up WAEL's Monte del Estado signal, especially because that hyper-local station can move to the translators.
 


Back
Top Bottom