I'm not sure these translators even care about ppm or ratings these stations are able to sell to a smaller client at a reduced rate with a smaller overhead . When done correctly these stations can make very good revenue .
outdated rules.
Translators in Houston don't play by those rules. To them, paying a fee if they get caught (if ever) is a lot cheaper than leasing out an AM or HD subchannel.they have to lease the facility that gives them the right to employ a translator, which is either an AM or and FM HD channel.
Translators in Houston don't play by those rules. To them, paying a fee if they get caught (if ever) is a lot cheaper than leasing out an AM or HD subchannel.
At some point, likely after the pandemic is under control, the Houston broadcasters need to establish a committee to police the translators and to submit violations to the FCC.
I believe some of the issues come from people with no broadcast management experience trying to run "radio stations" with no understanding of the rules and laws.
I am familiar with a DJ in another market who is great at his specialty. He somehow got a translator, and went through the transfer only because the seller did the FCC paperwork. But he then did not have an AM or HD2 to rebroadcast, did not understand that he could not "set the volume to 11" and many other things.
Eventually the other local broadcasters figured it out, complained and the FCC stepped in. But the FCC generally does not initiate investigations. If someone documents operations, with firm data on things like signal strength, lack of an AM or HD channel, unauthorized antenna height, etc., the FCC will investigate eventually.
SDK Franco should purchase KXXF in Winnie as well, solidifying their footprint in the Greater Houston area.
No thank you. The only folks that would be stuck listening to it would be in Beaumont / Port Arthur, not Houston.
Look around, Stan. The demographics are a changin' in the Golden Triangle. Beaumont itself is near 20% Hispanic in total population, Port Arthur is over 30%. I suspect you already know this, but I would expect more Spanish language programming and less Classic Hits formats to come.
Here are the stations that already serve the Spanish language programming you mentioned in our area.
KQBU
KTJM
KBEJ
KQQK
KBPO
KHTW
There are other populations that are underserved in our area, so we’ll see what happens here.
Just because someone is Hispanic doesn't mean they strictly consume Spanish language content. The use of Spanish language content by Hispanics in the US significantly drops with 2nd and 3rd generation Hispanic offsprings (the exception is Puerto Rico, of course).Look around, Stan. The demographics are a changin' in the Golden Triangle. Beaumont itself is near 20% Hispanic in total population, Port Arthur is over 30%. I suspect you already know this, but I would expect more Spanish language programming and less Classic Hits formats to come.
IIRC, Univision saw the path to upgrade 105.3 into Houston. Unfortunately, their plan to get 104.9 into one of MoCity never happened. When that plan fell apart, they sought the next best upgrade and sold the CP.had they been as short sighted as Cumulus, it may have very well ended up in the trash bin right along with KSTB.
Cumulus...well I'm not sure what their intention with 101.5 was. Maybe they hoped to jump one of the stations to Devers? I guess KSAM never budged???
Just because someone is Hispanic doesn't mean they strictly consume Spanish language content. The use of Spanish language content by Hispanics in the US significantly drops with 2nd and 3rd generation Hispanic offsprings (the exception is Puerto Rico, of course).
You also have to consider that 20% isn't much to begin with. When you factor in Hispanics that don't speak Spanish or don't consume Spanish language media, the number of potential listeners significantly decreases. You'd also have to fight KQBU, KTJM, and KQQK for listener attention (which isn't easy).
Look around, Stan. The demographics are a changin' in the Golden Triangle. Beaumont itself is near 20% Hispanic in total population, Port Arthur is over 30%. I suspect you already know this, but I would expect more Spanish language programming and less Classic Hits formats to come.