True fans of radio are a passionate bunch. If one of the jocks made public that God is taking over next week, the station's socials would be filled with anger and sadness--and people would probably start sending worthless missives off to any corporate email box they could find. I'm sure that's not the way they want their legendary little station to stumble through its final days.Can't say much more? Why not. I mean aren't they all about to get fired anyway? Besides, it's not as if WJBR being sold is not public news.
That "passionate bunch" is quite small. Most people will tune in one day...hear something different...scan to a different preset or flip over to Spotify/Apple Music/other streaming platform...and go about their day never giving it a second thought. Sentences that contain words like "legendary" and "radio" in the same sentence tend to gravitate towards message boards like this, but don't represent the vast majority.True fans of radio are a passionate bunch. If one of the jocks made public that God is taking over next week, the station's socials would be filled with anger and sadness--and people would probably start sending worthless missives off to any corporate email box they could find. I'm sure that's not the way they want their legendary little station to stumble through its final days.
I don't believe anyone ever said that "legendary" and "radio" do represent any type of majority. There are plenty of examples of small-but-mighty fans of a station making a stink after a format change. IIRC, there was even a write-up in the Inquirer about the listener response when one of our own stations went kaput. (Maybe Smooth Jazz? Maybe the second coming of Sunny? Who can remember?)That "passionate bunch" is quite small. Most people will tune in one day...hear something different...scan to a different preset or flip over to Spotify/Apple Music/other streaming platform...and go about their day never giving it a second thought. Sentences that contain words like "legendary" and "radio" in the same sentence tend to gravitate towards message boards like this, but don't represent the vast majority.
Few words, best analysis of all!Sentences that contain words like "legendary" and "radio" in the same sentence tend to gravitate towards message boards like this, but don't represent the vast majority.
One of the very significant things that the PPM showed is that the average person has two or three favorite stations, and from week to week, month to month, the one listened to changes… a little less to one, a little more to another. But very few have just one absolute favorite.That "passionate bunch" is quite small. Most people will tune in one day...hear something different...scan to a different preset or flip over to Spotify/Apple Music/other streaming platform...and go about their day never giving it a second thought. Sentences that contain words like "legendary" and "radio" in the same sentence tend to gravitate towards message boards like this, but don't represent the vast majority.
The HD2 audio quality is horrible. You’d think they’d upgrade that prior?WJBR is running a liner explaining the change, and that WJBR will remain online, but also…on 95.7-HD2.
Club Ben is dead. After being signed on and seemingly untouched for how many years.
Is 95.7-HD2 even reliable in Wilmington?WJBR is running a liner explaining the change, and that WJBR will remain online, but also…on 95.7-HD2.
Club Ben is dead. After being signed on and seemingly untouched for how many years.
They are not gonna blow up Ben fm for Acperhaps off Ben FM for a JBR swap wouldn’t be such a bad idea?
Philly hasn’t had a mix for a few years now… now the million dollar question would be… would Delilah be on both 95.7 and 101.1?
That’s a joke, right?perhaps off Ben FM for a JBR swap wouldn’t be such a bad idea?
Philly hasn’t had a mix for a few years now… now the million dollar question would be… would Delilah be on both 95.7 and 101.1?
For the two people who will listen?The HD2 audio quality is horrible. You’d think they’d upgrade that prior?