hipporadio said:
I am aware that (for years) FMs have been shuffled around in suburban and sub-politan areas in an effort by owners to "sweeten the pot". I have even seen very elaborate schemes (such as the one in coastal SC and GA back in the early 90s) that rewrote a quarter of the FM Table to increase the number of signals in Charleston and Savannah.
I've always found such attempts to "sweeten the pot" to be most entertaining. Looking back, the first I remember reading about a Connersville FM move to Cincinnati was in 1990. (Did the Radio One / Hughes family own anything more than WOL then?)
So here is where we differ. And please know that in saying this I define "service" as programming content, not just as a signal off a nearby tower.
To me, Greenfield lost local service when WSMJ's Paul Braden accepted that big check from the good Congressman Heftel. When Heftel fired up the fog machine and disco ball of Kiss 99, all local talk, news, weather, sports...all local service was gone. Sure, the signal didn't move. Or after the move to Post Road, at least not far.
The tower for 99.5 could have stayed behind that old chicken hatchery on West Main or moved a half a world away. No diff. With no local Greenfield service from that stick, it didn't matter where it sat. For me, losing our only local service in Greenfield was more objectionable than Connersville losing an FM where an AM remains. Connersville still has local service from 1580.
The person who made the choice with Greenfield was Paul Braden. Where Rodgers and Braden vary is that Braden never much cared about Greenfield. His interest was operating Musiplex, a Muzak knockoff on a WSMJ subcarrier. He made millions in selling 99.5 to Heftel and leased the subcarrier to continue operating Musiplex post sale.
To me, as long as Connersville still has 1580, I have very little problem with the FM move to Cincinnati. Local service continues. The plan for a move had been floated for years. Dave Rodgers finally chose (either on his own or as you suggest by proxy) to put it in motion. And with that 18 m R-1 check, he has certainly profited well from it.
Dave Rodgers is a good guy. Good for him. I also say good luck to Radio One with a mighty big gamble.