SirRoxalot said:
Somehow, I don't see Dick Greene setting up WECK as an entirely separate operation from WLVL. I expect that he'll attempt a more "regional" approach, and try to create some "synergies" and "economies of scale".
ThePickleReport said:
I see that as a mistake. I wouldn't pay $1.3 large to air the same programs as WLVL. That's just me.
According to US Census Bureau 2000 figures, the population of Cheektowaga is 94,019. It's one of the largest suburbs of Buffalo and larger than some cities in New York State. The combined population of the City and Town of Lockport is roughly 43 thousand.
IMHO, Simulcasting WLVL on WECK or vice-versa isn't a solution. The needs and interests of both communities may hold some things in common, such as growing suburbs and sprawl. It is true that Erie County's population shift is to the east and northeast, with some communities in Niagara County receiving benefit. However Buffalo-Cheektowaga-Williamsville are vastly different than Lockport-Town of Lockport-Wheatfield.
An argument can be made that Niagara County, outside of Niagara Falls is agrarian and rural, while the primary service area of WECK's signal covers a population that is urban and suburban.
These are very important issues when deciding what format a station will adopt and how it will be executed. A $1.3 million investment can't thrive on a "programming hunch" that is the brainchild of an owner whose claim to ownership fame is a station in Lockport. What worked in Lockport over the years won't necessarily work in Cheektowaga-Buffalo. In fact, there'a a greater likelihood that it will fail... quietly and miserably.
Hopefully, Mr. Greene will hire a program director with experience and allows him/her to develop a format and program the station to serve the greatest number of
potential listeners in the primary community of license. Yes, it
can be Tradio and Swapshop, as long as the shows are executed with professionalism and entertaining. It can even rely on a healthy dose of ethnic programming on Sunday morning to serve the vast Polish and Italian communities. Again, the shows need to be done professionally.
Whether the chosen format is Oldies or News-Talk, it needs to be designed and executed professionally and to a great extent, flawlessly from the very beginning. A radio station that's "slapped together" won't make a good first impression in the face of competition from established stations like WBEN, WNED-AM, WBFO and WGR on the News-Talk-Sports side of the ledger or WGRF, WJYE, WYRK, WTSS or WHTT on the music side of the ledger.
The last thing Buffalo needs is another WHLD-type effort. If this is the case, we'll lament the station's obituary within a year. Mr. Greene would be wise to have a good grip on reality in 2008.
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