Do commercial Gospel music stations do well in any market? It seems they are frequently being sold, for rather small sums.Maybe WLIB Gospel Music will moved to 98.7 FM to compete with K-Love CCM 95.5 and Vida Unida Spanish CCM coming soon to 93.5
Even if Gospel does well in some markets somewhere, NYC/Tri-State Area isn't one of those markets. A station like WLIB can get by, because there are so many people that some small fraction of them will find the programming meaningful, but it's a heavy lift to do any better than 'just ekeing by'. Maybe that's enough for WLIB-AM, but it won't fly if moved to 98.7, one of the more robust signals in the market. The opportunity cost will be huge.Do commercial Gospel music stations do well in any market? It seems they are frequently being sold, for rather small sums.
What's the logic behind that? Please explain yourself.Maybe WLIB Gospel Music will moved to 98.7 FM to compete with K-Love CCM 95.5 and Vida Unida Spanish CCM coming soon to 93.5 to replace Caribbean Music. If you want to listen to Caribbean Music, listen to Dahved Levy on 107.5 WBLS Sundays 12-4AM then 9PM-1AM Monday. Easy as pie.
Wasn’t there a Summit Communications in the late 1980s & early 90s that owned Kiss for a few years? I *think* they bought it from RKO and sold to Emmis.Summit has never been in New York City. They specialize in markets 50 to 100 that are not PPM markets.
That is correct. Summit owned WRKS from 1989 to 1994.Wasn’t there a Summit Communications in the late 1980s & early 90s that owned Kiss for a few years? I *think* they bought it from RKO and sold to Emmis.
I'm sure they would like to buy it but if there are other big offers I could see them shifting to 1050. In LA, Chicago, and Cleveland they are AM only.Assuming their existing operations with 98.7 are profitable, probably. The financing cost probably would not be that much higher than the lease payments to Emmis.
I'm sure they would like to buy it but if there are other big offers I could see them shifting to 1050. In LA, Chicago, and Cleveland they are AM only.
Good Karma could move ESPN Radio to 1050, but would those who currently listen on 98.7 follow them to an AM frequency that hardly anyone listens to?If Good Karma is outbid for 98.7, couldn’t they shift lmost or all of the ESPN programming to WEPN 1050 AM? They already own that station.
Absolutely. Way too much fantasy speculation is going on here.There's no reason why 98.7 can't continue as a secondary sports station in a big sports town like New York. It has to be a better option than the third or fourth tier formats that are being flung around in this thread.
Wasn’t there a Summit Communications in the late 1980s & early 90s that owned Kiss for a few years? I *think* they bought it from RKO and sold to Emmis.
Thanks for clarifying the confusion.That company sold off all of its radio stations and left the industry. There is now another company called SummitMedia LLC that is unrelated.
98.7 being sold is far from a "major if"; it is more of a foregone conclusion when the company (Emmis) has all but gotten out of the radio business.If 98.7 gets sold, and that's a a major if, it'll probably go to Good Karma. Only other company I see buying it? EMF. They must be waiting for a full market FM in NY to go up on sale for them to buy and flip to Air1.
Since the LMA is probably the same one negotiated by Disney, I cannot imagine they did not leave some sort of verbiage to prevent the rug being pulled out under them.
Urban One would probably be more interested in the Mediaco-owned assets (WBLS and WQHT), and less WEPN if they were to enter the market. Even if they did buy WEPN, what would they launch on it?How about Urban One?
Maybe they would want a sister station for WBLS, which it has been said on this board they will likely
be purchasing.
Maybe buy the IP of Kiss-FM back and relaunch it? I really don't see that happening though.Urban One would probably be more interested in the Mediaco-owned assets (WBLS and WQHT), and less WEPN if they were to enter the market. Even if they did buy WEPN, what would they launch on it?
Why would someone spend millions of dollars to launch a format from the ground up, aimed at demos that are not desirable to advertisers? It's been so long at this point that the "Kiss" brand has little to no value to anyone that matters.Maybe buy the IP of Kiss-FM back and relaunch it? I really don't see that happening though.