Will they ever update WLKK calls ?
Will they ever update WLKK calls ?
The filing fee to change call signs for commercial AM, FM, and TV is $110.
$110 is the same amount of revenue the station has generated in the last 6 months...
Call letters these days hold less meaning in diary reporting markets and virtually no relevance in PPM reporting markets. This is not to say they have no value. There are stations that rely on call letters, WYRK, WBEN and WGR being notable in Western New York. Listeners will often write "106-5," "930"; "55" or "550" in their diaries, and the station will receive credit for the notation. A substantial number of listeners in diary markets enter a radio station's frequency or slogan, e.g., "Kiss 98," "97 Rock," "Jack FM." Radio stations in diary markets, prior to each rating period, submit slogans to a slogan file at Nielsen in order to claim/justify credit for listening. Years ago, much of the Lake's diary ascription appeared as "Lake," "The Lake," "107-7," "107" (which in some cases was split with Q-107 Toronto) and "WLKK."
Whatever happened to the idea of just wearing a PPM and letting the box pick up a tone from the radio?
Great point, except the better question might be whether or not larger markets are doing this?Toronto has ten times as many people as Buffalo. PPM costs money, and Buffalo is to small for PPM to make financial sense.
Great point, except the better question might be whether or not larger markets are doing this?
Whatever happened to the idea of just wearing a PPM and letting the box pick up a tone from the radio?
No writing in a diary. Toronto market does that.
No need to care about call letters just as long as people listen long enough for the PPM box to hear the tone.
PPM Meter:
What have you been listening to since it's departure from radio on Friday.Of course “The Lake” still exists online and on 107.7 HD 2