Nostalgia said:
Mark and OK,
WZCC (formerly WDFL, WYNY, WMFQ, ect) was going to be my next station on the death watch. I was pitched this station by a broker a couple of years ago when it was still on the air. Jablamo, WRGO Radio LLC or whatever entitity the license is currently under got it as part of the package with WKZY and later WRGO through a transfer. You know, BOGO, buy one class C FM get one 1kw AM free while supplies last! For a while it was simulcasting the FM signal of the seller before they pulled the plug on it. I never did a thorough study of the station, Cross City or Dixie County at that time but it keeps popping up in the back of my mind. Mark I would love to hear what you think the value and untapped potential of this turkey is to balance OKs opinion of a radio cesspool.
Those who do not see the advantage is missing the real value because the negative thinkers are not thinking outside the box, and cannot see the
"forest for the trees." The
REAL value lies in the license itself, not necessarily the location. Once you have a valid radio license, on-air or dark, it doesn't really matter, you can always file for a modifcation of license to move frequency, increase power, change COL, move TL, etc., etc., etc. You are seeing the station only as it is and not as it can become.
With a COL change, this can be done provided you are not removing a community's only radio service. In the case of removing
WZCC, Cross City will still have
WKZY-FM and an unused vacant channel on 97.7 C3 licensed to Cross City.
WZCC's license can literally be moved to any state or any community as a first service provided the technical aspect works which is where the frequency move usually comes into play. The advantage of modifying an existing license as opposed to applying for a new station in the desired new location is quite simply in the first option you already have an existing and valid license. The second option can take as much as ten years to complete and is also much more costly as it is subject to the FCC auction process with multiple bidders coming out of the proverbial woodwork vying for the same frequency. By modifying an existing license, as I am suggesting with
WZCC, you completely by-pass the auction process, time and unnecessary expense. Hence, the license is
much more valuable than it appears to be on the surface even if it is licensed to Cross City, Florida.