J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
Earlier this year, there was considerable controversy in the Washington area when WETA-90.9 eliminated classical music to broadcast a 24/7 news/information format, even though much of WETA's schedule was also heard (and often in the same time slots) on WAMU-88.5.
This article on the Washington Post's website reports that so far, the move has not paid off either in more listeners or more donors (the latter being the reason WETA made the change).
The article reported that WETA's audience is down one-third since the change, and that during it's most recent fund drive, WETA raised about $35,000 less than in a comparable pledge drive a year earlier.
But it is still early. And for WETA, if they raise far more pledge $$$ from listeners with a 24/7 news/information format than they did as a (mostly) classical-music station, even if their total audience is considerably smaller than it was with the old format, then the new format will be considered a success.
Perhaps most telling to me was a quote from WETA general manager Dan DeVany, claiming that if Washington didn't have a 24/7 commercial classical station (WGMS-103.5), his station would not have dropped classical music.
But what happens if Bonneville (or another subsequent owner of the station) decides to flip WGMS away from classical music??
This article on the Washington Post's website reports that so far, the move has not paid off either in more listeners or more donors (the latter being the reason WETA made the change).
The article reported that WETA's audience is down one-third since the change, and that during it's most recent fund drive, WETA raised about $35,000 less than in a comparable pledge drive a year earlier.
But it is still early. And for WETA, if they raise far more pledge $$$ from listeners with a 24/7 news/information format than they did as a (mostly) classical-music station, even if their total audience is considerably smaller than it was with the old format, then the new format will be considered a success.
Perhaps most telling to me was a quote from WETA general manager Dan DeVany, claiming that if Washington didn't have a 24/7 commercial classical station (WGMS-103.5), his station would not have dropped classical music.
But what happens if Bonneville (or another subsequent owner of the station) decides to flip WGMS away from classical music??