F
fred flintstone
Guest
Way nefore WDEL announced it would drop Hannity, word from competitor WILM was that they would pick up Mark Levin.
To put it another way: DEL was complaining about being "urged" to carry another two hours from ABC (Levin does a two hour show) after a competitor had reportedly already picked up Levin.
Can a move by Hannity to WILM be far behind?
What is strange here is WDEL has consistently drawn a bigger audience than WILM by running syndicated shows against their competitor's mostly local schedule. WILM made news a decade ago by being the first station to drop Rush. The PD claimed the show had "peaked" but - coincidentally - the syndicator (Jacor) had begun to charge stations to carry it.
Before last year, WDEL was running Rush and Hannity. Before that, they had also run two delayed hours of Dr. Laura in the morning (with one local hour - later expanded to three). Now WDEL has become the local station and WILM is becoming mostly syndicated. It would not be surprising if Clear Channel, in full cost-cutting mode, goes all automated - all syndicated at WILM (dropping all local programming and firing the entire local air staff when the station moves to new quarters with new automation-capable equipment).
Two stations have essentially traded formats. Question is: WDEL beat local talk with syndicated talk before. Can it now beat syndicated talk with local talk?
Meanwhile, Hannity's spot on WDEL goes to WILM's former program director - the same one who said Rush had "peaked" back in the mid-90s. Now you know .... the rest of the story.
To put it another way: DEL was complaining about being "urged" to carry another two hours from ABC (Levin does a two hour show) after a competitor had reportedly already picked up Levin.
Can a move by Hannity to WILM be far behind?
What is strange here is WDEL has consistently drawn a bigger audience than WILM by running syndicated shows against their competitor's mostly local schedule. WILM made news a decade ago by being the first station to drop Rush. The PD claimed the show had "peaked" but - coincidentally - the syndicator (Jacor) had begun to charge stations to carry it.
Before last year, WDEL was running Rush and Hannity. Before that, they had also run two delayed hours of Dr. Laura in the morning (with one local hour - later expanded to three). Now WDEL has become the local station and WILM is becoming mostly syndicated. It would not be surprising if Clear Channel, in full cost-cutting mode, goes all automated - all syndicated at WILM (dropping all local programming and firing the entire local air staff when the station moves to new quarters with new automation-capable equipment).
Two stations have essentially traded formats. Question is: WDEL beat local talk with syndicated talk before. Can it now beat syndicated talk with local talk?
Meanwhile, Hannity's spot on WDEL goes to WILM's former program director - the same one who said Rush had "peaked" back in the mid-90s. Now you know .... the rest of the story.