I must say it has been an interesting read the past couple weeks trying to keep up with the jargon of you guys in the "know" of all the ins and outs of radio broadcasting. Corporate decisions, the FCC, the government rulings, CC is the great Satan, it's just the way things are with "BIG RADIO" now...blah, blah, blah. I also know that there are a lot of people out there that now don't have their buddies to listen to anymore. I'm a listener from Winston-Salem, an ex-FMX listener, 20 year listener, one of those listeners that some of you didn't think existed. One of those people that hates the fact that I can't find a decent station anymore now that FMX is gone. Regardless of how this transition came to be, it has come. I now realize that there isn't anything on the airwaves that can replace my beloved FMX. Some have said to quit whining, that this has happened before to heritage stations, that history repeats itself, big business will always do what is best for the bottomline. Well, I know that the current 105.7 doesn't meet my requirements, that's for sure.
Yeah, it IS like a death in the family. When you wake up in the morning expecting to hear a familiar voice and all you get is the most annoying "KISS loop" ever created, you feel abandoned, lost in the muck of coporate shenanigans. "What the heck is that?" I believe was my exact comment. Whoever thinks that the loss of FMX is just radio progress is lying to themselves. FMX served not just its own community of Statesville but also any listener that 100KW could reach that wanted quality radio, good music, real downhome humor, personal local stories, community involvement......I've said it before, radio with class. Something that CC or any other big radio broadcasting company doesn't seem to understand anymore. Maybe FMX was centered in Statesville, but its reach was HUGE. They would give traffic reports from Greensboro to Charlotte, even a fender bender on a back road a mile from my house one morning...in Pfafftown. Maybe some of you don't know where that is, but FMX did. So when you say that they didn't serve their area, you couldn't be more wrong.
It seems the purpose of this thread has strayed a bit, nothing wrong with that, I know how conversations can lead off in tangents. But the opening remarks really hit home with me, I am one of those listeners you didn't think was out there. I was a loyal FMX listener to the morning show, lunch and dinner. NASCAR was never covered so well, who else does qualifying? After Midnight was one of my favorites driving back from Boone at 1am. Why would you need a local DJ talking to you at that time of the morning anyway? The programming was always appropriate to the timeslot, even the bluegrass on Sunday nights. Advertising was tasteful, no tittybars here, no giving away of cases of beer from drunk DJ's. I could always count on it to be there when I turned on the radio and now it's gone. Thanks to CC for removing an icon from the airwaves. I know the decision was regional, Kimberly Miller from CC Corporate in San Antonio told me herself and she was very apologetic, in her coporate sort of way. But that doesn't change the fact that big radio will never understand what it takes to be a "local" radio station, integrity, and FMX was loaded with that.
So, if you don't understand what all the fuss is about, maybe you should check your own integrity.
Yeah, it IS like a death in the family. When you wake up in the morning expecting to hear a familiar voice and all you get is the most annoying "KISS loop" ever created, you feel abandoned, lost in the muck of coporate shenanigans. "What the heck is that?" I believe was my exact comment. Whoever thinks that the loss of FMX is just radio progress is lying to themselves. FMX served not just its own community of Statesville but also any listener that 100KW could reach that wanted quality radio, good music, real downhome humor, personal local stories, community involvement......I've said it before, radio with class. Something that CC or any other big radio broadcasting company doesn't seem to understand anymore. Maybe FMX was centered in Statesville, but its reach was HUGE. They would give traffic reports from Greensboro to Charlotte, even a fender bender on a back road a mile from my house one morning...in Pfafftown. Maybe some of you don't know where that is, but FMX did. So when you say that they didn't serve their area, you couldn't be more wrong.
It seems the purpose of this thread has strayed a bit, nothing wrong with that, I know how conversations can lead off in tangents. But the opening remarks really hit home with me, I am one of those listeners you didn't think was out there. I was a loyal FMX listener to the morning show, lunch and dinner. NASCAR was never covered so well, who else does qualifying? After Midnight was one of my favorites driving back from Boone at 1am. Why would you need a local DJ talking to you at that time of the morning anyway? The programming was always appropriate to the timeslot, even the bluegrass on Sunday nights. Advertising was tasteful, no tittybars here, no giving away of cases of beer from drunk DJ's. I could always count on it to be there when I turned on the radio and now it's gone. Thanks to CC for removing an icon from the airwaves. I know the decision was regional, Kimberly Miller from CC Corporate in San Antonio told me herself and she was very apologetic, in her coporate sort of way. But that doesn't change the fact that big radio will never understand what it takes to be a "local" radio station, integrity, and FMX was loaded with that.
So, if you don't understand what all the fuss is about, maybe you should check your own integrity.