The sunrise-to-sunset AMers coming on after WWII were at a disadvantage compared to their full-time market mates. Even then, when AM was still profitable, most daytimers were run on the cheap with brokered programming or niche formats such as religious or foreign language.
There were a few that bucked this trend and were quite competitive, doing mainstream formats often besting fulltimers in Hooper, Pulse and Arbitron ratings back in the day.
Some of the more successful daytimers in large markets of the 50's and 60's that I can recall include:
WXLW/950-Indianapolis: They had a good signal to carry the adult format across central Indiana. Since the 25+ audience mostly switched to TV for entertainment at night, the daytime-only operation was not a major handicap.
WAIT/820-Chicago: Also blessed with a fine signal, the beautiful music format was quite successful before the rise of FM.
WEEP/1080-Pittsburgh: With 50,000 watts, this station did reasonably well with two distinct formats. In the mid-70's a switch to talk led to a nice bump in the ratings. Then, reverting to country, it caught the Urban Cowboy craze at the end of the decade to be a factor in the market. I don't have the data handy, but I recall WEEP scoring above a 5 share in 12+ in at least one book circa 1979.
Can you think of other daytimers that did ``real'' radio and performed well?
There were a few that bucked this trend and were quite competitive, doing mainstream formats often besting fulltimers in Hooper, Pulse and Arbitron ratings back in the day.
Some of the more successful daytimers in large markets of the 50's and 60's that I can recall include:
WXLW/950-Indianapolis: They had a good signal to carry the adult format across central Indiana. Since the 25+ audience mostly switched to TV for entertainment at night, the daytime-only operation was not a major handicap.
WAIT/820-Chicago: Also blessed with a fine signal, the beautiful music format was quite successful before the rise of FM.
WEEP/1080-Pittsburgh: With 50,000 watts, this station did reasonably well with two distinct formats. In the mid-70's a switch to talk led to a nice bump in the ratings. Then, reverting to country, it caught the Urban Cowboy craze at the end of the decade to be a factor in the market. I don't have the data handy, but I recall WEEP scoring above a 5 share in 12+ in at least one book circa 1979.
Can you think of other daytimers that did ``real'' radio and performed well?