secondchoice said:jabba17 said:I don't think CC had to pay the owner of WWVA (AM) in WV for the use of those calls for 105.7. I think all CC had to do was slap on a -FM suffix.
WWVA is a “Capstar” station which IIRC is one of CC’s companies. If you look at the very bottom of the WWVA AM homepage you will see the swirl “C” trademark of CC. By the way there was some talk recently of CC moving the 1170 signal into Cleveland OH. I do not know if CC is going to do it now. They are rebuilding WWVA AM’s 3 tower antenna farm. All three free standing towers were snapped off during a “microburst” several weeks ago.
Zach said:Does heritage really matter outside of our geeky radio circles? I think the heritage of WSB on 750 AM outweighs the heritage of WSB on 98.5 FM in my mind. As long as the calls remain somewhere on the FM dial, what's the harm?
Tom Wells said:Heritage only matters to the people who are paying attention and expect continuity on a particular signal.
Changing call letters is the equivalent of telling your old listeners to go away, as you're decided to divorce yourself from your past
Just like I won't ever be able to forget WWVA in Gary In as noted in the previous post.
Tom Wells said:Didn't WWVA used to be AM 1270 in Gary, Indiana back in the 1960s?
In my head, I still can hear the jingle ",,,On WWVA, here's the latest news!...."
Zach said:Does heritage really matter outside of our geeky radio circles? I think the heritage of WSB on 750 AM outweighs the heritage of WSB on 98.5 FM in my mind. As long as the calls remain somewhere on the FM dial, what's the harm?
DavidEduardo said:Tom Wells said:Didn't WWVA used to be AM 1270 in Gary, Indiana back in the 1960s?
In my head, I still can hear the jingle ",,,On WWVA, here's the latest news!...."
WWCA was the call set for 1270 in Gary.
jabba17 said:Does the licensee have to be the actual licensee of record, for example, WKLS would have to use "Citicasters Licenses, Inc." and not "Clear Channel Communications, Inc."? This would affect Q100 as they would have to use "Susquehanna Radio Corp." instead of "Cumulus Media Partners LLC", right?
jabba17 said:Also, who "owns" call letters when it comes down to cross-band usage? The oldest user of record?
BRENT said:Or they might just think that WBtS, has WSB in it already.
Zach said:Does heritage really matter outside of our geeky radio circles? I think the heritage of WSB on 750 AM outweighs the heritage of WSB on 98.5 FM in my mind. As long as the calls remain somewhere on the FM dial, what's the harm?
DavidEduardo said:amos said:i'd never heard that network affiliation part of the rule, i think it may be new.
Not new, just not a radio rule. That is a TV rule. Radio does not have the same rule.
Provided, That the name of the licensee, the station’s frequency, the station’s channel number, as stated on the station’s license, and/or the station’s network affiliation may be inserted between the call letters and station
location.
jmtillery said:amos said:i can't see them moving WSB-FM from 98.5.11 years is nothing compared to WSB-FM's heritage -- since 1948. (although they were on 104.5 in the beginning)
This is something I didn't know. During what years was WSB-FM on 104.5? And when did WSB-FM move to its present 98.5? Also, do you happen to know the power levels of WSB-FM when it was on 104.5 and its format at the time?
Following in the footsteps of pioneer WSB-AM, WSB-FM was the first FM station in the Southeast, debuting originally on 104.5 FM in 1948. After Cox acquired the Atlanta Constitution, WSB-FM went silent in 1952, and returned a few years later on 98.5 FM. The station has been an adult contemporary music station since 1980.
Tom Wells said:Didn't WWVA used to be AM 1270 in Gary, Indiana back in the 1960s?
In my head, I still can hear the jingle ",,,On WWVA, here's the latest news!...."
amos said:btw, those are your broadcasting yearbooks on-line, right? thanks SO much for posting them.
jabba17 said:As long as we're micromanaging Cox's business, one idea would be to use WSBE. Nobody is using it, and spoken it sounds very close to WSB (double-you-ess-bee-ee). The "E" sounds like you're just drawing out the "B".
As long as we're micromanaging Cox's business, one idea would be to use WSBE. Nobody is using it, and spoken it sounds very close to WSB (double-you-ess-bee-ee). The "E" sounds like you're just drawing out the "B".