amisdead said:
I agree with you that KSBJ is kind of lame sometimes compared to KFSH or even KLTY, but you are absolutely wrong about everything else. KSBJ is, without any doubt, Contemporary Christian. "Praise & Worship" isn't even a recognized format.
I think our disagreement is a definition of terms. To me, the term "Contemporary Christian Music" is pretty much an umbrella covering everything that isn't hymns of centuries past, gregorian chants, and the like. I could give a rodent's posterior about what arbitron says on the KSBJ listing, they probably don't know a thing about Christian music, much less what formats it entails. To them it is such a minor player it doesn't warrant any sort of serious analysis. I ran into this working in Christian radio, there is no established definition, no charts, no standardization. Just a lot of folks out there doing their own thing under the banner of CCM.
CCM as I said is the broad general category. Under it --
Praise and worship (KSBJ, Calvary Chapel, AFR, Moody, and stuff like that.
AC - KLTY the vast majority of "CCM" stations K-LOVE, some of the WAY-FMs
CHR - more like the old pre-raid WCIE, perhaps Z-88 Orlando on occasion, some of the WAY-FMs like Colorado
Christian rock - power-FM in Dallas, Radio U, maybe Air-1
Now those are my categories, others may disagree, Arbitron sure doesn't track in that detail. And most Christian stations are a mixture of approaches with teaching and sponsored shows on Saturday night. Even KSBJ has a Christian rock show on Saturday night. But --- PW and AC are generally your female 25 to 54 demographics, ranging to Christian rock generally male 18 to 34. Most kids I know aren't really tracked that closely, but probably cluster on CHR because it is close to top-40. Especially if the Christian CHR includes Christian dance / party mix and Christian hip-hop / rap shows.
It is Christian CHR to Christian rock that would probably rate well in Houston. Based on the experience with Power FM, I think 30,000 supporters is not out of the realm of possibility for such a station in the Houston area. That's a lot of donations, maybe enough to support a small but dedicated staff. You got to go where the support is, if there is enough demand in an area, and enough people to support it financially, it will succeed. I'd worry, though, about a rural area unless you are going to satellite and automate with minimal intervention. It would probably be a one man station, more of a hobby than a living. Still, if you got the funds for equipment, and enough support to pay the satellite feed, it could be viable. Just make sure your business plan makes sense. It is a "count the cost of a tower" type of thing.