Why? Seriously, why?Just move the WJBR Call Letters to 95.7 and call it MIX 95.7 so simple and a no brainer.
I mean, it does fit the definition of “no brain,” in one way.
Why? Seriously, why?Just move the WJBR Call Letters to 95.7 and call it MIX 95.7 so simple and a no brainer.
Where did this timeline come from though? I would assume ownership changes at midnight, right? Why would the new owners want to have one additional previous-format morning show instead of just flipping at midnight? And at this point, why would the WJBR morning show even want to do one last show on a station that won't exist the next day?Read it again, Marcos_C - Tuesday 10/3 is likely the last full day of WJBR as AC.
Wednesday 10/4 will likely have the morning show, possibly another show (or shows) and then the format change before the day ends. That would mean that Wed. 10/4/2023 would be less than a full day of broadcasting the outgoing WJBR format.
Semantics and technicalities: I do realize.
One more day of pay on their final paycheck? To look professional as they shop around for new jobs? Feeling like the listeners deserve it?And at this point, why would the WJBR morning show even want to do one last show on a station that won't exist the next day?
They don't necessarily have to be in the same building per se... It's as simple as one studio locale feeding the tower (STL) until the new operation is ready to make the change and have their audio sent from their studios to their new tower... Odd though indeed how the timeline is so disjointed...I'm not sure I think morning show hosts get paid per episode, haha. Not sure how doing one more show--when the station is under the ownership of the company who basically took their jobs--would look particularly professional or unprofessional.
At any rate, I'm more questioning the validity of the timeline. Wondering what the source of it is. Just seems weird for the new company to not want to flip at midnight, and to instead want the fired staff wandering around the building for a few hours.
Maybe the hosts are just thankful to have a chance to say goodbye to their listeners. Many of us know that a chance like this is rare these days.And at this point, why would the WJBR morning show even want to do one last show on a station that won't exist the next day?
IIRC Beasley had WTEL parked on a religious station down South before bringing it back to Philly and placing it on 610. Not that anybody cared or noticed.Has any company that's put big-city calls into cold storage out in the sticks ever returned them to major-market use? I can understand the company not wanting another WJBR to start up in Philadelphia, but why would Beasley have a problem using the call in Boston?
Of course they are paid for every show. Either they are paid hourly like your every day employee, or they earn 1/52nd of an annual contract every week.I'm not sure I think morning show hosts get paid per episode, haha.
No, they are still on air playing music. RDS still reads WJBR.So did WJBR sign off @ midnight
Redirect attention to Posts 199, 200 and 201 of this thread which gave dates, times, last morning show and call letter change info:Everything here is valid, but I feel like these responses are missing the point. Or perhaps (and maybe more likely) I was clumsy when I was making the point. The timing is weird. It is strange for a new owner to have employees of the previous owner doing a final show after the deal closes. Regardless of what building they do it from (though, I would assume they'd be doing it from the same studio where they always did it). And a last show could just as easily have been scheduled for this morning instead the morning after the deal is closed and the hosts are no longer even employees of the station!
And is all of this for naught anyway? I feel like there's still a 50/50 chance WJBR is gone at 12:00am.