I heard KCMS 11/3 for an hour. Nothing too unexpected and certainly on-brand, even with two versions of Joy to the World.
Warm 106.9 was commercial-free in morning drive on 11/5 - a cellular company footed the bill in return for a minimal mention.
I'd like to ask you all if it makes sense for Warm in particular to go all Christmas in 2020. The Christmas format iHeart gives them is a car crash - extreme oldies from the Nat King Cole and Andy Williams era, novelties by Willie Nelson, relatively new stuff from Googoo Dolls and Taylor Swift.
There was a Hollywood Reporter article from 2011 confirming that Christmas was a winner for broadcast radio. Justification was that ratings doubled and that new listeners outnumbered those chased away. Some stations further justified the switch by saying listeners in Nov and Dec would stick around in Jan.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/christmas-music-radio-station-ratings-269928
With Warm I don't know if this holds. First, a lot of pros here assure me that advertisers don't make buying decisions based on Christmas ratings. Second, Warm skews a lot more younger and active than when I moved here in the Nineties ... "Billie Jean* and "In the Air Tonight" are not relaxing favorites no matter what the station says. A Christmas mix that was compatible with 106.9 in the Nineties can't possibly work today, can it?