. If you are a commuter living at the Jersey Shore, the AM's are a better choice.
Show me WEMP in Philly or WWFS in Atlantic City, not a shot!
Don't forget, that the major New York FM's all cover the New York Statistical Metropolitan Area completely. WCBS-FM, and Z-100 don't have the best signals in southern Somerset County, but they can still be heard, past that point, to the south, you are in Mercer County and out of the New York Ratings Market.
Ad agencies buying the New York Market don't really care if a station has a few listeners in Atlantic City or Philly. They specifically buy local stations in those markets if they want to reach those consumers.
Personally, I don't think the NY AM all newsers will be that threatened by what Merlin is doing, possibly other than more comprehensive traffic reports. From what we've heard so far, the female leaning features Merlin is offering probably won't appeal that much to the traditional All News audience. Merlin is really looking to get the younger women who are now in the cumes of Lite-FM, Fresh, KTU, PLJ and Z-100 to periodically slide down the dial to catch traffic, entertainment news, household tips etc on 101.9 News.
Given the fact that many listeners, especially younger listeners, only listen to FM, at some point the demos are going to get so top-heavy on AM that it will no longer be competitive with FM and CBS will have to move its all news format to FM, but that could be many years away.
It would be interesting to get a weekly cume for all the NYC AM stations, along with cume for each standard demo group, and compare that with similar statistics for all FM stations.
Roughly speaking, each of the top three FMs, all owned by Clear Channel, have a weekly cume of about 5-million, and WCBS-AM and WINS each have a cume of about half that number. Then you have WFAN with 1.6-million, WABC with 1.1-million, and WOR with 857,000. Compared to FM, you probably won't find all that many younger women listening to AM, especially to WFAN, WABC, and WOR, but you sure will find them listening to the three top Clear Channel stations, PLJ, and Fresh. That's the target group that Merlin is really shooting for, not the CBS-owned AM all newsers. For that reason I wouldn't expect CBS to sacrifice the potential of one of its FM music stations to simulcast traditional All News on FM, at least not soon.