Can't you put the FM channel number between the call letters and COL? No one does because channel numbers are meaningless to listeners, but AFAIK it is allowed. (Aside from translators, where the channel number is baked into the call sign.)
Can't you put the FM channel number between the call letters and COL?
My question would be "how many listeners know what an FM channel is or means?"Because no distinction is made about "channel number" as being only for TV, and since (last time I checked, anyway) an FM license does also state its channel number, that would be legal.
KDKA, KYW, WBZ, etc. certainly made "Westinghouse" a prominent part of their IDs for many years. I guess the idea was that if listeners trusted the maker of their household appliances, they'd trust that company to run a good radio station. On the other hand, I have no idea why a small regional broadcaster with no identity outside of radio would weigh down their TOH routine with gratuitous boasting. My favorite country station up here is WXXK Lebanon, NH, whose TOH ID goes "You're listening to the Valley's BIG Country, Kixx 100.5, WXXK Lebanon, part of the Great Eastern Radio family of stations!" What a mouthful! It's even worse on sister station WHDQ, a classic rocker that not only has a slogan and a corporate name to announce, but also two translators and an HD2!I won the argument, but the executive in question went on to build Miami's largest and most successful ad agency, so I have to ask: is adding ownership to the station ID a positive thing?
... so I have to ask: is adding ownership to the station ID a positive thing?
KDKA, KYW, WBZ, etc. certainly made "Westinghouse" a prominent part of their IDs for many years. I guess the idea was that if listeners trusted the maker of their household appliances, they'd trust that company to run a good radio station.