What radio station in Chicago will change formats first in 2026
Audacy only has a few viable-in-the-future stations/formats on AM that are not on FM. The Score is likely at the very top of the list and I would agree out of their current portfolio, 104.3 is the most likely. Off the top of my head... I would put KILT, WCCO, WBEN in the next tier.When 670 WSCR degrades their signal moving to the WYLL transmitter site in Desplaines, 104.3 FM is likely to become WCSR FM to provide the much needed FM presence for the Score.
When are they moving (along with WBBM)? Thanx...When 670 WSCR degrades their signal moving to the WYLL transmitter site in Desplaines, 104.3 FM is likely to become WCSR FM to provide the much needed FM presence for the Score.
Considering how rhythmic the market is, possibly. Adult Hits is a gamble but it could also work if they take notes at co-owned WARH.I see either 100.3 become more AC, probably Rhythmic and label themselves as the "Feel Good Variety" or B96 follow Star 94's music route.
Good question. Thought it would have happened fall of 2025. It's possible Audacy hasn't gotten the price they want for the land of the legacy WMAQ/KYW site and are holding out for the right buyer.When are they moving (along with WBBM)? Thanx...
What are oldies and country doing at the low end of the noncommercial FM segment?No format changes. They may tweak things a bit, but when iheart, Audacy & Cumulus own the majority of the stations, no major changes will be coming. The only thing that you MAY want to count as format change is if they basically do a format swap by just switching frequencies, say oldies from 88.1 to 88.3 and country from 88.3 to 88.1. What little ad dollars remain in the market they may not want to rock the boat. All they'd be doing is swapping rating numbers between their stations.
They COULD do that on 88-92 MHz NCE-FM band, they just would have to run them as noncommercial stations. NCE-FM operators tend to eschew such formats, unless they are considered things like Rare R & B, Rare Pop Oldies, Folk Rock, and Bluegrass Country. The shows are often limited to short day parts often, on weekends, perhaps 2-4 hours per format. You can make a case where Pop Oldies and "Dusty" R & B are vastly underrepresented on Commercial stations, due to eschewing High Age Demographics (where the money is, maybe sponsored by condo and retirement communities, and Elder Law? Think Scottdale and The Villages.What are oldies and country doing at the low end of the noncommercial FM segment?
I realize there are no format limitations on that band, and I suspect the original poster was using 88.1 and 88.3 as typical FM frequencies, not as the actual frequencies of any Chicago station, but I asked anyway.They COULD do that on 88-92 MHz NCE-FM band, they just would have to run them as noncommercial stations. NCE-FM operators tend to eschew such formats, unless they are considered things like Rare R & B, Rare Pop Oldies, Folk Rock, and Bluegrass Country. The shows are often limited to short day parts often, on weekends, perhaps 2-4 hours per format. You can make a case where Pop Oldies and "Dusty" R & B are vastly underrepresented on Commercial stations, due to eschewing High Age Demographics (where the money is, maybe sponsored by condo and retirement communities, and Elder Law? Think Scottdale and The Villages.
I just threw them in there as an example of frequencies. Could've been 108.1 1/2 or 105.2/3rds or any frequency.What are oldies and country doing at the low end of the noncommercial FM segment?
Audacy only has a few viable-in-the-future stations/formats on AM that are not on FM. The Score is likely at the very top of the list and I would agree out of their current portfolio, 104.3 is the most likely. Off the top of my head... I would put KILT, WCCO, WBEN in the next tier.
He may end up one day on WIND where his dad used to work.If Cumulus liked a conservative message, they wouldn't have removed Michael DelGiorno from WWTN Nashville. They would have syndicated him, and he would be on his all time favorite station now, WLS. Now he's on 107 radio stations, with Premier Radio Networks, iHeart Media, many of which compete with Cumulus, but not in Chicago yet.
I agree with this prediction.When 670 WSCR degrades their signal moving to the WYLL transmitter site in Desplaines, 104.3 FM is likely to become WCSR FM to provide the much needed FM presence for the Score.