BarryATL said:CBS changed the calls for the Sports FM that they flipped in Tampa this week.
upstate29651 said:RadioNerd78 said:Geez - you guys are right. Too bad the fans of this city don't fill a 90,000 seat stadium in Athens, a 45,000 seat stadium in Atlanta, and contribute to the filling of stadiums in Clemson, Auburn, Knoxville, Tuscaloosa, Columbia, etc. every Saturday in the Fall.
You guys must not spend a lot of time listening to either sports station here, if you think Pro Sports is what drives programming.
Also haven't noticed the Falcons having much trouble filling their stadium lately.
The above is meaningless when talking about sports radio.
G
RadioNerd78 said:upstate29651 said:RadioNerd78 said:Geez - you guys are right. Too bad the fans of this city don't fill a 90,000 seat stadium in Athens, a 45,000 seat stadium in Atlanta, and contribute to the filling of stadiums in Clemson, Auburn, Knoxville, Tuscaloosa, Columbia, etc. every Saturday in the Fall.
You guys must not spend a lot of time listening to either sports station here, if you think Pro Sports is what drives programming.
Also haven't noticed the Falcons having much trouble filling their stadium lately.
The above is meaningless when talking about sports radio.
G
Really? Because it seems to be what you're basing your assessment of Atlanta as a "non-sports city" on.
upstate29651 said:I stand by my statements. Atlanta has already proven herself to not be a sports radio market. We're about to receive further confirmation.
OhioMediaWatch said:This is national corporate strategy for CBS Radio - they want a full-time FM sports radio station in any large market they're able to do it in, and killing a floundering music station provides that opportunity in Atlanta. (I say "any large market they're able to do it in" because it's NOT an option for CBS, say, in NYC, where they make boatloads of money on WFAN on the AM side.)
The "GC" comes from one-time owner General Cinema.EJM said:However, what might "save" the WZGC calls is that they didn't become associated with one particular format (Rock for WYSP; AC for WLTE).
EJM said:However, what might "save" the WZGC calls is that they didn't become associated with one particular format (Rock for WYSP; AC for WLTE).
NightFlyer said:If only Neil Millman were here to add his comments..
Miss him around here..
NYC has something like 6 class A clears. ATL, of course, has one. What I don't understand is why the FCC doesn't try to pick up some of the Canadian class A clear allotments that have gone silent (at least 3). I know the FCC can't enforce a "use it or lose it" rule internationally, but I would think they could somehow convince the Canadians to do something, scarce public spectrum and all that.secondchoice said:A lot of posters are convinced that the FAN in NYC will move to FM soon. Unlike Atlanta, NYC has a viable AM market CC is even buying WOR AM (to protect Rush due to station cap limits but that is another thread). Radio is an important part of CBS empire, but not as important as TV. Unless there are a couple of stations swaps with other operators, (AM's for FM's and a whole lot of cash) they really can not do much in NYC without selling a TV property (not going to happen!).
IMHO: 92.9 Atlanta will not get WXRK calls within the next year. In PPM, call letters are useless except for a part of the branding (WSB), and to keep the FCC happy.
*What is the agreement between CC/Premiere and Cumulus (legacy ABC/Citadel) regarding Hannity? Specifically, does Cumulus still have any right-of-first-refusal for placing or keeping Hannity on a Cumulus station especially vs. a CC station?
RoddyFreeman said:*What is the agreement between CC/Premiere and Cumulus (legacy ABC/Citadel) regarding Hannity? Specifically, does Cumulus still have any right-of-first-refusal for placing or keeping Hannity on a Cumulus station especially vs. a CC station?
Based on what I read, while Hannity is a Premiere Radio show, Cumulus has the right to keep it on any of its O&O's.