Discovered a Spanish language bootleg station on 91.7 FM. Heard fairly well on the west side of Cleveland.
Maybe they have no memory of what happened in the 1990s when a number of Spanish language pirates went on-the-air, and one of them was in the commercial part of the FM band. I remember reading that they bought their transmitters from a firm in Canada and some, maybe all, had pretty good coverage as they were, probably, non-directional. This went on long enough for the first one on to be covered by a front-page article in the Plain Dealer who, obviously, had no idea that they were a pirate and were breaking the law.
The PD acknowledged that in a subsequent article. Finally, the FCC swooped in, and that was the end of that. What the consequences were for the pirates may have been reported, but I didn't see it.
Yeah, coming from the old Detour bar on West 9th [I think] I remember hearing that pretty much all over the downtown area. It took a while to get it shut down, but overall I thought it was done very well, too bad they weren't able to make it legit. It lasted for quite a while before it got terminated.I remember the frequencies. 88.1, 90.7, 91.9. 93.7. Not 100% on the consequences but I think the fines were around $10K at the time.. if they had to pay that per station I have no idea.
There was also a dance music pirate on 96.9 ran out of a gay night club around the same time, Grid Radio.
The famous Cleveland Rap group, Bones, Thugs and Harmony, had a pirate station broadcasting un-edited Rap, mostly from their core group of artists, somewhere around St. Clair Avenue.Yeah, coming from the old Detour bar on West 9th [I think] I remember hearing that pretty much all over the downtown area. It took a while to get it shut down, but overall I thought it was done very well, too bad they weren't able to make it legit. It lasted for quite a while before it got terminated.
If radio is a dead media, why are (there) still pirates?
SIMPLE. RADIO IS NOT A DEAD MEDIA. The number of stations that are on-the-air, particularly on FM, and the heavy spot-loads are proof.
I was asking a question. Maybe you don't understand the sarcasm in the sentences after the question.secondchoice: show your data to substatiate your comments.
Retired broadcaster. Still in touch with what's going on with friends who still work in the business. Often, with a cluster of stations at their disposal, bonus spots are often dumped among several of the stations elongating the spot breaks.secondchoice: show your data to substatiate your comments.
radiofollower: are you working in radio advertising sales? If so, what market?