Our "corporate champions" acknowledge that radio has lost revenue and TSL, especially over the last 5 years. Yet, you refuse to acknowledge that changes in programming and management may be responsible for those losses.
Somehow, at a time when all the buzz is about digital, there are still people who invest in a hundred year old analog technology. They're not doing it for nothing.
Because the facts say otherwise. Yes radio is losing audience, but the specific stations are low power AM stations that no one listens to any more. Corporate owned stations are doing just fine. When you use the word "radio" it encompasses many things.
So the top 10 in 1998 actually took more of the market revenue than it does, collectively, today.
Now may I have more Kool-Aid, please?
Don't look now, but Alternative 107.7 sounds better than anything on that frequency in the last ten years. The audio is hyper processed but it sounds pretty good. I've observed at least a half dozen businesses and shops that I routinely visit switched from 92.9, 96.9 or 103.3 to Alternative 107.7 and kept the station on for the last four weeks. Six businesses aren't a definitive indicator, but the people who work in those offices and shops must like what they're hearing on 107.7. Then again, we'll see what happens two and a half years down the road when the 107.7 format switch cycle comes due. But for now, it sounds pretty good.
Very odd choice. Most markets have only one Rock station aimed at younger Rock fans. NYC has none. Yet Buffalo will now have TWO, WEDG and WLKK. Yes, WEDG is more of an Active Rock station, and it seems WLKK is aiming more Alternative. Yet the fan base is the same... young men in their 20 - 40.
I also don't believe that statement that 95% of WBEN's listening is on AM. That makes no sense if you're simulcasting on a full-power FM, 20,000 watts at 800 feet. They've got Rush, they've got Hannity. Someone was listening. Maybe as others have speculated, the signal doesn't do well in downtown Buffalo. The tower is in a rural area between Buffalo, Rochester and Dansville. But I don't believe that for every 100 people listening to 930, only five were listening to 107.7.