I think I remember the River initially having a slight AC slant to it. I remember in the very early days of Eminem the Party was the only station in town that would play him.
jetfli said:secondchoice said:The “names” do not mean a whole lot to the typical music listener... Some truly great Nashville stations of the past (WMAK, WVOL, WKDA /KDF, WLAC, and WSIX etc.) may be recalled by some of us in the business, but programming content is king in PPM. This was really “brought home” to me last week. 96 Rock (WKLS) was successful for decades in Atlanta because it was the dial position and the music type. They had “evolved” from an AOR station (like the old 1970’s WKDA FM / KDF) to a classic rock with a slight AOR flavor. 97.1 came in with a “better” playlist, fewer commercials and took no PPM prisoners. (WKLS is now Project 9 6 1) Just last week I was in an office on a sales call and heard a radio playing in the copy room so I ask what station they were listening too and she said 96 Rock, just then the 97.1 sweeper played!
IMHO, If the listener can find your station’s signal on scan, they like your music (or talk show host) and you get preset you are in business. How many people will stay with your station or switch just because they like or dislike the voice sweeper or liner in between the songs? Play a bunch of crappy songs or put on a boring talk show host and see what happens. It is the good content (music, or talk show host) not “cute” nicknames or heritage that will win in PPM.
You invalidate your own argument. Your example shows that a great name and great brand (96 Rock) will be remembered by the people (not just radio folks) even years after the station ceases to exist.
I do agree with your point, that Content Is King. However, I maintain a good name and strong branding is just as much a part of a station's content as the music or the talk show host.
secondchoice said:IMHO, If the listener can find your station’s signal on scan, they like your music (or talk show host) and you get preset you are in business.
secondchoice said:jetfli said:secondchoice said:96 Rock (WKLS) was successful for decades in Atlanta because it was the dial position and the music type. They had “evolved” from an AOR station (like the old 1970’s WKDA FM / KDF) to a classic rock with a slight AOR flavor. .
The fans of 96 rock in Atlanta speak as highly about that station as we speak of Rock 106 here in the 6-1-5. They were never an underground or progressive rock statiopn, but they were a very excellent AOR station for the seventies! When I spent time down there, I would listen to 96 rock. I hated to come back to Nashville since there was nothing like 96 rock here (pre Rock 106).
ShadowB said:Proper advertising like TV, billboards....YES but who does this now? Very few I think. It blows me away that radio makes money on advertising but doesnt spend any on advertising! A client asked me that one time..
the golden boy said:Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't the River initially start out as an adult CHR station? Perhaps, the name change was to separate themselves from the old Y107 and giving themselves a fresh start.
DJOnAStick said:I can't say, from a programming and sales point of view that I blame him really. But from a listener point of view, the station has never seen the numbers that it did then nor the media exposure. Now it's basically a washed out Hot AC station and nothing more. It sounds just like any other Clear Channel station sharing the same format as it.
deltas69 said:actually, WHIN am was identical to WKRP..pre Kix days..we had a drop dead traffic girl, a newsman that was the spittin image of les nesman,and really did love the hog futures, a dj (kris with a k bradley) that looked very much like johnny fever, a pd that despite his best efforts..could not keep us under control..and a manager that trembled at the sight of the owners pulling in the parking lot !! the first time i saw WKRP..i thought..hell i lived this for five years...damn i miss it..lol ;D
And what was your fashion statement at the time? Bad as it was, it was the 'style' at the time!!..OH...and none of us at the time thought anything about this fashion faux pas..lol
Gallatin or Portland?and I've never owned a leisure suit in my life.. usual dj attire...jeans,t shirts, fu man ch stache
yorkie9 said:And, let's not forget that the iPOD generation doesn't even remember Y-107 - it's just the older folks like us and I preferred the pre-Coyote defection Kix 104 anyway! The radio that came out of that dumpy little building up in Gallatin was the closest to WKRP that we ever got! ;D