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The Ranch...Best Choice for ALL things Texas Country...

Jay Weaver said:
That's the point I have been trying to make.

..The biggest thing it affects is the quality and experience of the air personalities because with increased revenues, they are capable of employing quality air personalities. This is where the quality of KFWR shows now. It will never sound like a big time station. It isn't a big time station, it's a local station broadcasting from Mineral Wells, Texas.
No, the "point" you were trying to make wasn't only about their signal. You were trashing the station as a whole, from the talent, to their playlist, to their local spots, and also their signal. All this negativity is sickening. I guess YOU should run the station and make it perfect, since you seem to know everything!
 
ButtnPushr - How long have you worked in radio?
 
Hang in there - you'll learn.
 
Glad to know that you favor 95.9 The Ranch www.959theranch.com. The music is staying true to Texas Country, and the imaging is progressing for a more hard-core sound...I know, because I'm imaging the station. These are just baby-steps for a station that WILL be hard-core very soon! Trust me...Keep listening! ;D
 
djmireles said:
Glad to know that you favor 95.9 The Ranch www.959theranch.com. The music is staying true to Texas Country, and the imaging is progressing for a more hard-core sound...I know, because I'm imaging the station. These are just baby-steps for a station that WILL be hard-core very soon! Trust me...Keep listening! ;D
I have NO problem with the imaging, the music, or the air staff. Any chance of getting a stronger stick so people east of Arlington can hear ya? I sure would like to listen in my truck!!
 
djmireles said:
Glad to know that you favor 95.9 The Ranch www.959theranch.com. The music is staying true to Texas Country, and the imaging is progressing for a more hard-core sound...I know, because I'm imaging the station. These are just baby-steps for a station that WILL be hard-core very soon! Trust me...Keep listening! ;D
Same great radio... Less Ratings. I know their stick is bad but maybe a .1 at least? You gotta pull for the Ranch and the people who work there. They deserve at least above minumum reporting status. (Noticed that sister station KTFW is now at a .0 too!)
 
I think the low ratings can be attributed to only covering a fraction of the Metroplex. Much like KLAK, they're not aiming toward the cities, just trying to cater to the outskirts... which sucks, because in my opinion, they're better than the other Country stations here. (Which sound exactly like EVERY other Country station on the planet) The same 40 songs beaten to death!!
 
ButtnPushr said:
I think the low ratings can be attributed to only covering a fraction of the Metroplex. Much like KLAK, they're not aiming toward the cities, just trying to cater to the outskirts... which sucks, because in my opinion, they're better than the other Country stations here. (Which sound exactly like EVERY other Country station on the planet) The same 40 songs beaten to death!!
They have gotten ratings in the past and they have great coverage in Parker,Johnson, Wise and enough of Tarrant country to get some diary return. It might be tough with the 100% Texas angle to get anything but again I think they at least deserve something. Let's hope PPM can really help them.
 
most of us who love The Ranch never travel to the Far East. understand, I went to school in Dallas but can't stand it now. I do agree that their playlist is limited, but it is unique. They were playing Pat Green and Jack Ingram a very long time before Nashville "discovered" them. I mean, Jack was the "Best New Male Artist" at the CMAs this year. Oh, PLEASE!!!! ::)
[/quote]

Just need to clarify a bit here...the station that introduced those guys to the Metroplex was most likely KHYI...KHYI was "The Range" as far back as 1999 although they did flirt with "Y-95 The Range" in the early 2000's. The Ranch has only been around since late 2002. Range has been calling themselves Americana since early 2003, (my guess is in response to the debut of the Ranch) while Ranch only embraced the official format designation a few months ago. There has been much confusion over the years between the two that Ranch has smartly either generated or taken advantage of. Check out www.kyhi.com to see a great example. IMO they have copied quite a bit from the Range and then have tried to do it better, spending more money on marketing & personalties. Nothing wrong with that at all and I'm sure it is a decent station, just tired of seeing Ranch getting so much credit where it is not completely deserved. Range could do a lot better but that is another story. ;)
 
ButtnPushr said:
That's weird. It's the same website as www.959theranch.com

-Or is it??

Yes, it is. But also note that the letters are transposed: "KYHI" takes you to 95.9 The Ranch and KHYI (the correct call letters) takes you to 95.3 The Range.
 
Touche'. Thanks jd, good catch!! So, is StaceLG implying that The Ranch copied The Range, but is just executing it a lot better??
 
Jay Weaver said:
That's the point I have been trying to make.

A station can sound great, but unless it can survive, it isn't really a good, long lasting station. How does it survive? Commercial spots. The difference here is that with the kind of signal it has, it can sell local commercial spots very well, but has a hard time with national spots or spots placed by the large agencies for commercial products due to it's lack of signal over half of the suburban and urban D/FW market. Consequently, it is broadcasting to less than half of the D/FW market, Fort Worth, and the smaller less populated towns and rural areas around it's transmitter site in Mineral Wells west of Fort Worth. A few years back, when Gary Moss owned KTFW, he needed agency spots, bad, but it was difficult to attract any agengcy accounts because they were southwest of the Metroplex. They were, and still are, a Glen Rose radio station. Listen to either of the two stations, KFWR or KTFW, and neither has a very large amount of national spots. They are loaded with local spots. Result - allot of commercial spots eventually tend to drive listeners away. Five, six, seven spots between songs will kill you, but two good solid NATIONAL spots, sound good and bring in much more cash. This effects the whole sound of a station. The biggest thing it affects is the quality and experience of the air personalities because with increased revenues, they are capable of employing quality air personalities. This is where the quality of KFWR shows now. It will never sound like a big time station. It isn't a big time station, it's a local station broadcasting from Mineral Wells, Texas.
So what's the definition of "quality" on air personality?? A BIG TIME station??? You're so off.....
 
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