RickStarr said:
Most sports formats were not instantly successful; indeed, in the early days most tried to emulate WFAN and failed. That station, it should be remembered, already had a successful morning show (Imus) from the WNBC format, onto which they grafted another 20 hours a day of sports. They started from a strong AMD; others who tried started from no morning show, and did not hit their stride for several unprofitable years. On the AM dial you make your money in AMD and to a lesser extent PMD. All the rest is filler. (As formats continued to fragment it became more obvious that a 2+ share could work, but that took time - both for owners AND for advertisers.)
And I'd like to comment on this, too.
What all-sports radio stations tried to emulate WFAN and failed? I'm not saying there weren't any; when Imus began to syndicate his show lots of sports talkers picked him up (they even had a recorded bit they would play on Imus' show that would say "The revenue and audience generating portion of this station's lineup is now over" when the show ended).
But WIP didn't. WIP pretty much started the idea that the callers were ancillary, limiting them to 90 seconds a call, while WFAN often embraced the caller to the point many of them were as well known as the hosts and one of them, Joe Beningo, began a career as a sports talk show host on the station at the management's urging.
And I think WIP was the second all-sports station.
WKNR in Cleveland was the most popular sports talk radio station in the '90s, ratings wise.
These stations went all-sports rather quickly and were successful. In fact, though WKNR is not the station it was in the '90s, it continues to be the station that won't die and I'm inclined to believe it's because of the format in a sports lovin' town.
I'm sure there were some failures- 1210 in Philly was one I can recall failing despite a superior signal (I've forgotten what their call letters were- the former WCAU)- but I think the real reason there was the fact the talk shows they had weren't as good as the ones on WIP.
A Pittsburgh sports station wouldn't have had that problem.
I just can't believe that in a city where half the stations were playing polka on Saturday mornings all-sports radio in Pittsburgh would be dismissed for so many years because it was "too formatted." This is Pittsburgh! The old ladies I spoke of above know who is playing tight end for Penn State!
Again, it was so successful so early in all of the neighboring cities. How successful would all sports radio have been in 1992, when all the local teams were winning and there were no newspapers and the format was taking off everywhere else (Case in point, WSCR started in Chicago on a day to dusker in 1992 and by 2000 they had removed the mighty and historic WMAQ from it's 50KW perch at 670, just as WFAN did going from 1050 to WNBC's 660. And Imus wasn't on WFAN when they were generating the momentum on 1050 to make such a move- forgive the digression)? When Stan and Guy were so successful on KBL WDVE would give them an hour of air time on weekends?
The market was crying for such a station, yet it took years for it to come to fruition! And when it did it was initially on Prime Sports 1360, which was all-automated (though their hourly updates did provide a start for several sportscasters).
One guy I know who now works in sports talk even asked me during this era "Why doesn't a station around here pick up an all-sports format, put on Imus- who would be huge in Pittsburgh- and reap in the benefits?" I had no answer other than the fact it seemed all the good AM signals were taken and talk on FM was practically unheard of then, so it just wasn't on our mindset then.
But wasn't the fact all the good AM signals were taken the reason why 104.7 came to be in Pittsburgh and somewhat revolutionized what talk radio could be on FM nationwide in terms of drawing an audience and making it work? Wasn't WAMO-FM the home of the Pittsburgh Maulers in 1984? Weren't, as I said before, Stan and Guy on WDVE and the Steelers on 96.1?
Why wasn't it on our mindset then?
It would have been huge, and that's why I will always say the powers-that-be's hesitancy to establish a sports talk radio station in town has to be one of the biggest failures in the market's history.