• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

The flagship station and local disasters

Say your station is the flagship station for an NFL team, and right before the game starts, or during the game, some disaster happens locally or an absolutely huge local area news story breaks, how is that handled. Some, if not many, major league teams are on the market's news/talk leader.
You would still need to feed the game to all the affiliates, most of whom are not effected by the local situation in and around the flagship station's market. I assume most stations have contingency plans in case something like this occurs.
 
I don't remember ever hearing an NFL broadcast interrupted on any station, flagship or otherwise. These "disasters" are quite rare, and the NFL takes up like 60 hours year of air time per year.

Having said that, when the Indianapolis Colts were on News/Talk WIBC, Emmis had the ability to feed WIBC different programming than the network. The would do a ten second news brief in the legal ID break. "WIBC Indianapolis. A man has been arrested on drunk driving charges after hitting a school bus. Details after the game." Now that the Colts are on all-sports WFNI, I suppose that it doesn't really matter.

My guess is that all stations originating syndicated programs use an auxiliary studio and not the flagship station's main air studio for production of the network broadcast.
 
I do remember when the Iraq war began. Here in Cleveland, the initial bombings took place in the middle of the Cavaliers-Grizzlies game, which flagship WTAM/1100 carried.

Shortly after their PBP voice, Joe Tait, made an announcement regarding the bombings, WTAM then took ABC Radio News' live coverage (which WTAM was an affil of until 2005) right after the next commercial break. The rest of the game coverage aired on one of WTAM's sister FM stations, WMMS/100.7, and WTAM inserted quick spots in the middle of the ABC coverage stating the game was continuing on WMMS. IIRC, the rest of the FM stations in the CC/Cleveland cluster interrupted programming in some way, shape or form.

Fortunately for most NFL games, they do air on Sunday, so moving game coverage in the event of a major news event - presuming the game would still be played - would not be an issue. Plus the true flagships for most NFL teams are on FM anyway, either music or spoken word.
 
We had a similar situation in Chicago, when the war in Afghanistan started, after the 9-11 attacks.

The Bears flagship is Newsradio 780 WBBM. When the news broke, they moved the game to CBS
sister station 670 WSCR, and went all news on WBBM.

This is the only time I remember this happening due to breaking news.

When The Hawks were in the playoffs, The schedule conflicted many times with The Cubs
On WGN 720, bumping the Hawks to 560 WIND. WGN has to give priority to the Cubs, due
to their arrangement with the team. The Cubs eventually agreed to move to WIND, so the
final playoff games could be on the stronger flagship WGN.

I know the WGN example was not due to any type of Crisis, I just thought about it while
I was thinking about your topic.
 
In my past experience with the Georgia Bulldogs and Cincinnati Bengals radio nets, most, if not all, flagship stations that also produce games do so out of an auxillary studio.

We are also getting away from flagship stations producing the broadcasts particularly in college sports where a school will award an outside company the production rights to the broadcasts. In that way the flagship station takes the satellite feed just like the rest of the affiliates. This allows the flagship to automate and not have a board op during the whole game.

Many years ago in a life far, far away, I had to board op Georgia Tech football games. WGST in Atlanta produced the games and they simply put a program output of their board up on the satellite feed. You had to be quick on the local breaks or you'd clip WGST spots on the feed. That's before computers and we ran spots on these things called 'carts'. And you had to manually load each break.
 
Almost all major sports networks do parallel feeds that are not affected by the breaks, bulletins, weather warnings or other potential interruptions by the "flagship" stations. During local break time, the net will maintain either effect mike audio for stadium/arena natural ambient sound, rejoin music, or silence.

I've board operated for many a game, and back in the days when the net feed was the flagship station's audio, dozens of board ops along the line would play "cat and mouse" with the net trying to keep unwanted flagship station ID's and the like off the air.
 
I was the board op for the Dallas Mavericks Radio Network when they were on KLIF. We did run the network from the main KLIF on-air studio. We did not go away in the event of a local disaster, we carried the game, but we did drop-in :30 newscasts during the in game local breaks. We fed the network(via the Texas State Network) with auxilliary on the board, but for program for KLIF. TSN got our aux signal and sent out either with isdn, switch 56 or maybe satellite to the affiliates. I'm not sure.
 
I worked at a Reds affiliate in Indiana in 1976. We had a telco line. There was a Kings Island floater spot that ran on the network but not WLW. Lots of Reds affiliates took an off air feed from an FM station that had a telco line.
 
Speaking of flaghship stations, how many Urban or Urban AC are flagship stations of sports teams?
 
salemjedi54 said:
Speaking of flaghship stations, how many Urban or Urban AC are flagship stations of sports teams?

D.C.'s WHUR-FM is the university owned flagship for Howard University football, and UAB Blazers football and basketball is cleared locally in Birmingham on WUHT "Hot 107-7".
 
Nate Wesley said:
salemjedi54 said:
Speaking of flaghship stations, how many Urban or Urban AC are flagship stations of sports teams?

D.C.'s WHUR-FM is the university owned flagship for Howard University football, and UAB Blazers football and basketball is cleared locally in Birmingham on WUHT "Hot 107-7".

What about professional sports teams?
 
During the great Northeast blackout of 2003 normally all-news WCBS moved a Yankee game to sister station WFAN so they could report on what was going on. Even though CBS also has sister station WINS carrying an all-news format, this is the kind of emergency where you would expect people to flock to their radios, thus the change for one night.
 
Nate Wesley said:
salemjedi54 said:
Speaking of flaghship stations, how many Urban or Urban AC are flagship stations of sports teams?

D.C.'s WHUR-FM is the university owned flagship for Howard University football, and UAB Blazers football and basketball is cleared locally in Birmingham on WUHT "Hot 107-7".

Despite being university owned, WHUR doesn't carry any Howard Bison sports events.
 
salemjedi54 said:
Nate Wesley said:
salemjedi54 said:
Speaking of flaghship stations, how many Urban or Urban AC are flagship stations of sports teams?

D.C.'s WHUR-FM is the university owned flagship for Howard University football, and UAB Blazers football and basketball is cleared locally in Birmingham on WUHT "Hot 107-7".

What about professional sports teams?

The closest I've seen so far was WMIB-FM in Miami. When it was still an urban AC station, WMIB simulcast one Miami Heat game per month, while the flagship rights remained otherwise with sister station WINZ-AM.

Of course, that's not the case anymore. WMIB flipped to Spanish AC a few months back, and CC literally fumbled away the Heat rights -- just after this season started!!! -- over to Jefferson-Pilot's WAXY-AM.
 
The King Bee said:
Almost all major sports networks do parallel feeds that are not affected by the breaks, bulletins, weather warnings or other potential interruptions by the "flagship" stations. During local break time, the net will maintain either effect mike audio for stadium/arena natural ambient sound, rejoin music, or silence.

I've board operated for many a game, and back in the days when the net feed was the flagship station's audio, dozens of board ops along the line would play "cat and mouse" with the net trying to keep unwanted flagship station ID's and the like off the air.

When I board-opped in college in Toledo, our sports station (WLQR) used a "dirty" feed for the John Cooper and Jim O'Brien call-in shows and a clean feed for OSU football and basketball games. These were the feeds provided by the Ohio News Network and flagship WBNS. All local breaks were silent during the games, but for the call-in shows you had to be careful to not let Columbus commercials or WBNS ID's out over the air. WBNS' ID got out a few times but no one ever said anything.
 
schmave said:
The King Bee said:
Almost all major sports networks do parallel feeds that are not affected by the breaks, bulletins, weather warnings or other potential interruptions by the "flagship" stations. During local break time, the net will maintain either effect mike audio for stadium/arena natural ambient sound, rejoin music, or silence.

I've board operated for many a game, and back in the days when the net feed was the flagship station's audio, dozens of board ops along the line would play "cat and mouse" with the net trying to keep unwanted flagship station ID's and the like off the air.

When I board-opped in college in Toledo, our sports station (WLQR) used a "dirty" feed for the John Cooper and Jim O'Brien call-in shows and a clean feed for OSU football and basketball games. These were the feeds provided by the Ohio News Network and flagship WBNS. All local breaks were silent during the games, but for the call-in shows you had to be careful to not let Columbus commercials or WBNS ID's out over the air. WBNS' ID got out a few times but no one ever said anything.

One time while I was in Miami the local station carried the Yankees feed of a game, but who ever was the board op never switched back to their regular programs and WCBS 880 all night,
 
Going back to Nashville said:
When The Hawks were in the playoffs, The schedule conflicted many times with The Cubs
On WGN 720, bumping the Hawks to 560 WIND. WGN has to give priority to the Cubs, due
to their arrangement with the team. The Cubs eventually agreed to move to WIND, so the
final playoff games could be on the stronger flagship WGN.

That's stupid. Since when did Chicago have any hockey fans? The Cubs and WGN should have stood their ground and honored their contract, not let that other team bully them and steal their radio home.
 
liradioisbad said:
During the great Northeast blackout of 2003 normally all-news WCBS moved a Yankee game to sister station WFAN so they could report on what was going on. Even though CBS also has sister station WINS carrying an all-news format, this is the kind of emergency where you would expect people to flock to their radios, thus the change for one night.

On the other hand, the Yankees were playing a post-season game when the Staten Island Ferry crashed into the dock and WCBS did not interrupt the game or cover the disaster immediately. The CBS Radio Network was forced to go to CBS2 TV reporters to get voice reports and sound for the network. WCBS later said they were contractually required to stay with the game.
 
That wouldn't be the case now - "Newsradio 880" keeps going for streaming listeners (and 101.1-HD3?) while there's a game on the AM signal.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom