- WMMR is in first place, having jumped .5 to 7.6?
That is a statistical wobble. It is hardly a "jump". 0.5 is well within the margin of error.
- WHYY is in second place(?!?!), having jumped a whopping 1.5 from (5.9 to 7.4)?!?!
January often brings big adjustments. Audience is disrupted for multiple reasons over the holidays, and the panel always has high (over 10% turnover in "Holiday" so things change.
- WDAS is in third place, having dropped 1.2 points (8.5 to 7.3)?!?!
That is still within the margin of error.
- WXTU inexplicably jumped from 2.9 to 5.3 and is now in 5th place?
Again, January brings lots of changes. Disrupted habits, new PPM panelists.
And, this year, not just the pandemic but also a lack of new PPM meters to give to new panelists, so the panel may be unbalance and undersized.
- B101.1 crashes down to earth, returning to the same share they had before Christmas music. They dropped nearly 10 points! Their cume is far less than it was in the months leading up to Christmas.
All all-Christmas stations do that. They take advantage of two months for big Christmas sales opportunities.
It's been that way with all-Christmas stations since the mid-90's.
- WOGL, meanwhile, jumps a full point from 3.5 to 4.5.
Post Christmas recovery for a format that tends to lose a lot to the market's Christmas station(s).
- WPEN nearly doubles (1.6 to 3.1). Their stream jumped from 0.7 to 1.9. (Sure, sure, sure, sure, sure.)
At those low levels, very possible.
- WPHT scores a lowly 1.3. The WPHT stream, meanwhile, scores...a matching 1.3?!?!
Also very possible. AMs are getting more streaming numbers as the quality is better and coverage much better.
- WTDY continues basically flatlining.
I don't really see how this can be right.
Since ad buyers don't use just one book, this will level out or become the new norm as America gets into new habits as the pandemic declines. Ad buyers average 4, 5, 6 or more books and exclude the Holiday and December books so right now they are averaging September, October, November and January at least...
And remember, they buy rating, not share. As an example, in NYC there are 8 stations tied for #1 in 18-34 based on rating.
Agencies don't even see those share point wobbles as they don't look at share. And they generally look at 6 AM-/PM M-F, so different data there, too.