Allfirdup said:
psonderman said:
I'm not familiar enough with what preceded Rush's entrance into the Columbus market to tell you why he may have garnered a 7 share back then. I'm willing to bet, however, that he was introduced to central Ohio with more fanfare than what ushered in WVKO's debut. I do vaguely recall dozens of billboards...Clear Channel, if memory serves me. He also had a TV show. That didn't last long, though, did it?
When Rush started in Columbus he was on 1230 WCOL at the time they were simulcasting the oldies format of WCOL fm, the stations were owned by Nationwide. it took a while but the finally they built a talk station around Rush. the changed the calls to WFII (1230 FYI) also the show that followed him was John and Ken out of LA. then later Alan Colmes had the afternoon slot. Nationwide never spent anything on promoting the station. later when Clear Channel bought the station they moved rush to WTVN and changed the talk format to sports
You are "kind of" correct with this. We began 1990 simulcasting WCOL AM/FM, but split the AM at one point to a satellite delivered format called "Kool Gold" (a 1955-1963 based format) on the AM. It worked for exactly one rating book, then died. This was all under the ownership of Great Trails Broadcasting. We added Rush Limbaugh because of popular demand. (We were literally getting requests to carry his program). Now, I'm kind of fuzzy about exactly when 1230 went talk fulltime, but I know it was still under Great Trails ownership, not Nationwide.
We did some billboard and bus advertising for Rush (it was part of the affiliation agreement). Frankly, that was about all GTB could afford at the time. But, Rush delievered. In demo, he was pulling 5's and 6's 25-54...and his daypart 12 plus was about 2.5 to a 3 share. I remember we also carried Barry Farber in the afternoon and, maybe it was Bruce Williams at night. Yes, we did later try adding Alan Colmes, but the numbers weren't there.
We flipped to "1230-FYI" under Nationwide's ownership. With their money, we could afford Imus in the morning....and he pulled some decent numbers, considering the signal limitations. But Rush had already left. 'TVN had contracted him...and we were deserted. But, Rush pulled even bigger number for WTVN. 1230-FYI continued with G. Gordon Liddy Middays...we did John & Ken for a little while in afternoons...even had Tom Leykis at night.
Bottom line was: the conservative shows did OK. The liberal shows less so. It just didn't seem like the liberal audience would come in time to replace the conservative audience when the programs and viewpoints changed.
This is why I have ridiculed the argument about liberal programming failing because it's on "bad sticks". If Rush can pull a 5-6 share in demo on a bad stick...what's wrong with the liberal programs? Attention prog-talkers: develop programming that can pull those numbers on a bad stick...and the good sticks will follow.
Remember...it's content...not politics.