D
del_griffith
Guest
Had a chat with an owner who is familiar with Columbus. We were discussing the state of the state of AM radio.
Now while WTVN still does pretty well, the rest of the AM stations in Columbus are beyond life support. It's telling when the second highest rated AM station in the market is a public radio outlet.
We were trying to pinpoint when AM radio in Columbus died. I point to two dates:
When Bob James left WRFD, that to me said daytimer AM radio was terminal. The effort at great entertainment ended.
When Jack and Dick were let go at WBNS, that said AM radio was terminal.
WRFD gave a real fight until that time. Even during the Country days, they were an active outlet with tight playlists, great jingles and identifiable personalities. After that, it was the same for their oldies but goodies product.
It seems most markets have a blow torch AM (or two in the major markets) that still command an overall decent rating. The rest seem to have no chance.
Now while WTVN still does pretty well, the rest of the AM stations in Columbus are beyond life support. It's telling when the second highest rated AM station in the market is a public radio outlet.
We were trying to pinpoint when AM radio in Columbus died. I point to two dates:
When Bob James left WRFD, that to me said daytimer AM radio was terminal. The effort at great entertainment ended.
When Jack and Dick were let go at WBNS, that said AM radio was terminal.
WRFD gave a real fight until that time. Even during the Country days, they were an active outlet with tight playlists, great jingles and identifiable personalities. After that, it was the same for their oldies but goodies product.
It seems most markets have a blow torch AM (or two in the major markets) that still command an overall decent rating. The rest seem to have no chance.