You bring up an interesting point, albeit indirectly. Maybe we need a few move-outs. Maybe we need a few stations that service the surrounding area a little more, and Nashville less. The Cromwell stations do a reasonably good job of this (while still covering Nashville--most of them, anyway), but it seems like we may have too many stations for a town our size. Of course, the Cromwell stations will never be real players here, but they seem to know that. Most of the rest of them seem to think that they should all be #1, but that is, of course, impossible, unless there is a 17-way tie for #1, also unlikely.onetake said:I forget the order of "move in's" to Nashville but seemed to remember 104 being one of the first.It covered northside and downtown well and when their sales people got out and noticed all the holes in parts of town like Brentwood and Green Hills they realized some revenue potential was lost. Never seemed listenable in Franklin. But for a while the answer out of gallatin was to push the modulation up even louder. This was before the current days of cleaner limiters that mask some of the overmodulation. But Kicks sounded good talent and music wise, but was sometimes a challenge to take noting the real local stations like 92, 95, 98, 103, and 106 were full, impressive and everywhere.
Didnt they relocate the tower/transmitter site?
May not be as glamorous to be Murfreesboro-centric or Clarksville-centric, but that may be where their real audience (and thus their survival) lies.