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WFAN to 101.9

Totally agree with d21. This is the direction FM is headed in. Here in Philly, CBS blew up WYSP 94.1, a fourth-in-the-market rocker, and replaced it with a simulcast of 610 WIP, revamping the lineup.It's doing quite well, and 610 will clear the national network here in January. Another group, Greater Media, blew up an also-ran Hot AC on 97.5, and also is doing sports talk. It's pulling respectable shares, too. Philly has news-talk on FM too with the 106.9 they got from Family Radio. I'd suggest XCountry and Hardrocker drop the pitchforks and torches and grow up.
 
... plus, Greater Media just agreed to sell 97.5 FM/Philadelphia's sister station, AM 950, to the aforementioned Camping & Co...

@LuperM: For awhile, WRNN decided to mix in "Cheers" reruns with their hack job nightly news in the evening; not sure if that's still the case...
 
Nice to see a moderate opinion from "HardRocker9" on this... Tongue
LOL, yeah D to the J, was actually hoping that maybe it would become a Pulse 1019 or Energy 102, how's that for a curve ball ;D or stay new rock. Anyway, it is sad to see New rock vanishing from the airwaves once again, since the NY radio dial is so repetitive. While in the city I found myself tuning into them more and more often. As far as the FAN goes I am a listener, especially when I was attending school down in Maryland, it was great to be able to hear the Giants game with good reception, but I guess fringe listeners don't matter in ratings? Im not sure how it works. We'll just have to wait and see what happens, but I guess I have options with my new HD radio.
 
Wait one second in San Francisco 95.7FM THe Game (Entercom all-sports) ain't doing well in the ratings but has been on the air for 2 years now. Each time KNBR 680/1050 shut them down in the Bay Area Books.
 
How is the 101.9 signal? I'm in Ocean County, NJ and while NY FMs aren't usually receivable in homes, most can be received in cars. In fact, 101.9 penetrates deeper into Ocean County than 98.7, which has to deal with adjacent channel 98.5 in Ocean Gate.

We all know 660 AM has a huge signal, but it gets eaten up on secondary roads by overhead wires. 101.9 may be a bit shaky in northern and central Ocean County, but it won't be bothered by the buzzsaw from those wires.

My daily commute takes me to the Monmouth-Ocean border. The signals on both 98.7 and 101.9 improve the further north I drive.

WFAN got one of the best class B FMs in NY. It's closest adjacent channel is 102.1 out of Philly, unlike 98.7 which as mentioned has to deal with 98.5 in Ocean County. :)
 
radioguy39nj said:
How is the 101.9 signal? I'm in Ocean County, NJ and while NY FMs aren't usually receivable in homes, most can be received in cars. In fact, 101.9 penetrates deeper into Ocean County than 98.7, which has to deal with adjacent channel 98.5 in Ocean Gate.

We all know 660 AM has a huge signal, but it gets eaten up on secondary roads by overhead wires. 101.9 may be a bit shaky in northern and central Ocean County, but it won't be bothered by the buzzsaw from those wires.

Would they run 101.9 in mono? Is there a need to run a spoken-word format in stereo?
 
Jacko said:
WRXP is only .3 behind 92.3 Now and is trending upward, while Now is on a slide. I'd imagine that WRXP's demo skews a bit older and may be a bit more appealing to buyers than Now, so CBS would be foolish to flip WRXP now. I agree that alternative is having a bit of a resurgence. The past year or two has seen a number of crossovers, not to mention a fair deal of alternative songs being used in commercials. Right now, 'RXP is doing a nice job balancing the newer product, especially the crossover stuff, with the big tracks from the 90s and early 2000s. NYC has enough CHR and pop music. The only down side is CBS's mis-management of its rock properties. If by some miracle CBS is to keep 'RXP as a rock station, they should not make too many tweaks--what Merlin has done seems to be working.

Jacko

100% agree my friend! Unfortunately for us; this post is like the proverbial "tree fall in the forest" beyond earshot...

-
 
DG02816 said:
Wright,

I'd think they'd do most local stuff in mono with games in stereo.

WEPN-FM doesn't broadcast Jets games in stereo, but the Jets' affiliate in Ocean County, WCHR (105.7 FM) does. WCHR is a classic rock station. :)
 
The FCC and large corporations have succeeded in destroying the landscape of terrestrial radio! Congratulations! I hope you're proud of yourselves!!!!
 
I swear CBS has absolutely no logic what so ever. No one can forget their "Jack" stunt back in 2005. CBS-FM had decent ratings at the time, I believe being #3 or #4 in NYC. Yet, they just put jack in expecting ratings to increase. Now we have 101.9 actually gaining ratings while filling in a huge format gap. What's CBS gonna do? Once again, screw everything up. WFAN on FM will FAIL and I am going to laugh at those executives when they wonder what went wrong with WFAN-FM. HAVE SOME COMMON SENSE YOU RETARDED CORPORATE FAT CATS.
 
Lee Anderson said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't sports teams pushing operators everywhere for FM coverage?

After WFAN comes to FM I can count on one hand the number of NFL teams left whose flagship stations aren't on the FM band (Redskins, Bills, Packers, Broncos). And some of them used to have FM flagships before station changes.

Also, the Flyers and Sixers changed stations in Philly because apparently they didn't want playoff games to be relegated to AM over early-season Phillies.
 
radioguy39nj said:
DG02816 said:
Wright,

I'd think they'd do most local stuff in mono with games in stereo.

WEPN-FM doesn't broadcast Jets games in stereo, but the Jets' affiliate in Ocean County, WCHR (105.7 FM) does. WCHR is a classic rock station. :)

Which brings up a good point, CBS can keep the alternative rock on 101.9 and air the major games there (or on NOW). They already do this with WCBS 101.1. But they are too vain for that.
 
Lee Anderson said:
Ok, you have an FM signal, why run it in mono? It seems a waste to have spectrum that was designed for a better listening experience wasted by broadcasting in mono.


Beasley broadcasting did this with 96.5 When it was Talk as WWDB the only time they put the signal in stereo was when sid mark came on and did friday with frank And sunday with Sinatra But back in 2000 the stereo Light stayed on after the show for a few days turned out Beasley was Flipping 96.5 to a music format
 
islanddxer said:
radioguy39nj said:
DG02816 said:
Wright,

I'd think they'd do most local stuff in mono with games in stereo.

WEPN-FM doesn't broadcast Jets games in stereo, but the Jets' affiliate in Ocean County, WCHR (105.7 FM) does. WCHR is a classic rock station. :)

Which brings up a good point, CBS can keep the alternative rock on 101.9 and air the major games there (or on NOW). They already do this with WCBS 101.1. But they are too vain for that.

You're fighting progress, and it's a losing battle. Frankly, I think it's the best of both worlds. The music options generally available through Pandora, Spotify, and streaming apps are infinitely customizable, and I can find exactly what I want to entertain me musically. At the same time, I think radio's pushing forward and making sure that it's financially viable long-term.

Ask newspapers how burying its head in the sand and staying the course worked out.
 
reelyreal said:
You're fighting progress, and it's a losing battle. Frankly, I think it's the best of both worlds. The music options generally available through Pandora, Spotify, and streaming apps are infinitely customizable, and I can find exactly what I want to entertain me musically. At the same time, I think radio's pushing forward and making sure that it's financially viable long-term.

Ask newspapers how burying its head in the sand and staying the course worked out.

This is it, in a nutshell. Your New York radio dial is going to continue to do away with music as time progresses, except for music that appeals to demographics least likely to having access to other content. Talk can be live and local, but even when it's syndicated it's still immediate and interactive, which netcasting and streaming lack at this point. So that will be where radio goes — to the places it can still excel over streaming.

Market #1 is of course its own world, but if you look to smaller markets, trend is already well underway. In my hometown of Birmingham, Alabama, there are three FM talk stations and two FM sports stations. And that doesn't include other spoken word content like preaching or NPR. The state of Mississippi has had an entire statewide talk network for years now and right as I moved out an FM sports station came on in the rural Delta.

Music on the radio is dying a slow, painful death, just as it died from AM 30 years ago.
 
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