TXCalradio said:This city needs a station that plays AC hits from the 60's and 70's. KODA-FM (Sunny 99.1) dropped the 70's in 2011 and KLDE-FM is no more.
Mediafrog+ said:TXCalradio said:This city needs a station that plays AC hits from the 60's and 70's. KODA-FM (Sunny 99.1) dropped the 70's in 2011 and KLDE-FM is no more.
Sunny dropped the 70's tunes because the fans of that era of music had aged out of the station's target demos.
A 60's-70's AC hits station would have bigger challenges than a straight up Oldies format. Aging demographics. Not happening. Tried in DFW with the Platinum format, didn't last.
rbrucecarter5 said:That wasn't the situation with Platinum. First off, 96.7 had a lousy signal over the East part of the metroplex where a lot of wealthy suburbs are. People in that area proved they wanted something different when they made KMAD a popular rim shot - before it got jammed by a stupid translator. What really ended Platinum, though, was when WBAP decided they wanted to be on FM like so many other AM stations around the country. Platinum didn't have a chance the moment WBAP wanted the frequency.
rbrucecarter5 said:That wasn't the situation with Platinum. First off, 96.7 had a lousy signal over the East part of the metroplex where a lot of wealthy suburbs are.
People in that area proved they wanted something different when they made KMAD a popular rim shot - before it got jammed by a stupid translator.
rbrucecarter5 said:People in that area proved they wanted something different when they made KMAD a popular rim shot - before it got jammed by a stupid translator.
DavidEduardo said:rbrucecarter5 said:People in that area proved they wanted something different when they made KMAD a popular rim shot - before it got jammed by a stupid translator.
KMAD is not remotely a rimshot to any part of the DFW Arbitron survey are. It's 65 dbu signal ends a full half-county away from the closest, northern, edge of the MSA.
I spot checked and found no instances of the station showing in the DFW ratings... so either it never showed or only occasionally bounced into the ratings. "Popular" is wishful hyperbole.
bturner said:The 60s and 70s format that was Platinum 96.7 was doing surprisingly well and gaining nicely. It seemed a nice continuation of Memories 96.7 that had been programmed by John LaBella who did AM Drive ( a name you know from KZEW). His tragic death on the way home from work sort of brought the station to its knees. A change to The Twister was short-lived before Ron Chapman spearheaded Platinum 96.7.
The station could be heard in several businesses in the Keller and South Lake area where my parents lived.
I was rather shocked at the ratings and more shocked about the format choice. It certainly was not a typical or expected choice. Sure a simulcast of WBAP is cheaper and not a bad move at all but I wonder if the move had not taken place if Platinum might have been more successful in revenue generation.
rbrucecarter5 said:The 60s and 70s format that was Platinum 96.7 was doing surprisingly well and gaining nicely.
As I recall, it was starting to make serious inroads on the ratings.