The rumor mill says that it is in process of being sold to allow 97X to return to Cincinnati.
mattsledge said:Highly doubtful.
The current investors of woxy.com have no interest in terrestrial radio at all, and Doug & Linda Balogh are retired in New Mexico.
hipporadio said:This would NOT be hard to understand, since First’s “MAX” turned out to be a “minimum” in the ratings. Sorry, a move of the current facilities to Mason is NOT going to make that much difference – neither would a new format! Could your market (which lost seven-percent of its metro population in the last few years) be maxed out? How many FMs do you need? How many new 2.0 stations could be cool and worth killing brain cells over? I realize (for many here) this is your “home town” (Cincy IS the city I grew up listening to radio from – and LOVE) – BUT, aside from the CC Talk AM “cartel” – your market is not that healthy. A Class-B “rimshot-plus” owned by a major player is headed for third-tier talk... So what else would you expect from the future of 97.7. Maybe its “future” is its past – back in Oxford and the near north side... College students orgasmic over a station that introduces the modern-day version of U2 or Jesus Jones? Was it REALLY any different for “us” back then with Q102 or WEBN? Maybe some of you folks should stop thinking like the “corporates” (in their little box) that you often criticize.
Jeff_Davis said:Hippo, where do you get your statistics? The Cincinnati market gained about 16,000 people since the last realignment of the markets. The city of Cincinnati lost people, but the overall market gained. That's the story in just about any large market with an older city core and lots of 'burbs. The Fall book came in with a 12+ population of 1,705,200 while Arbitron's new figures recently released show a 12+ population of 1,721,200. How is that a 7% decrease?
Jeff_Davis said:...in the case of WKLU, that they are in "flat" Indianapolis. Rimshot signals have a better chance when there aren't "seven hills" blocking them. I would consider WYGY to be fairly successful with a fairly consistent 3.0-4.0 share 12+. WOXY is just too small to crack the market, I agree with that.
Jeff_Davis said:A very good question that you might also ask Mike McMurray after he made millions on 97.3 FM. You can trace it all back to money, of course. The Baloghs wanted it, First gave it to them, and they believed they could create a better signal that would be attractive to one of the Cincy corporate giants. First does this all the time. Is there a LOCAL entity that would be willing to shoulder that debt and try to make a go of something local on 97.7? Who has the money to compete? I think if Marty Pieratt can be successful in Aurora, and WNKR can do it in Dry RIdge, why not in Oxford? Any takers?
Oh, you made yourself crystal clear.88.9 Miracle said:mattsledge said:Highly doubtful.
The current investors of woxy.com have no interest in terrestrial radio at all, and Doug & Linda Balogh are retired in New Mexico.
I guess I didn't make myself real clear. The rumor is that First Broadcasting is selling 97.7, WOXY to (?lala.com? - not sure) who plans to return 97X back to the airwaves on their original terrestrial signal and station, WOXY, 97.7.
hipporadio said:This all goes back to 97.7. I knew (well) the VERY FINE MAN (Rick Sellers) who ran that station right out of MU back in 1974. BTW... Sellers now owns 1450 KMRY in Cedar Rapids, Iowa... MAN that great guy loved Class 4 AMs. WOXR was a fine local station in Oxford (in the Burger King) that "paid its bills" and had an interested and loyal group of listeners in the mid/late 70s.
keys2 said:hipporadio said:This all goes back to 97.7. I knew (well) the VERY FINE MAN (Rick Sellers) who ran that station right out of MU back in 1974. BTW... Sellers now owns 1450 KMRY in Cedar Rapids, Iowa... MAN that great guy loved Class 4 AMs. WOXR was a fine local station in Oxford (in the Burger King) that "paid its bills" and had an interested and loyal group of listeners in the mid/late 70s.
Hey Hippo, I was one of those loyal listeners of WOXR from the early 70s through about 1977 or so when they flipped to Top 40/Disco WOXY as Y97. WOXR was a great little station that never took itself too seriously. They played lots of great music that none of the other FMs would touch.
So how did you know Rick Sellers? I remember him and several others from the old WOXR. Gerald Wayne Anderson, Dave Michaels, Bob Nave, Mark Fullerton..... Any of those ring a bell?
hipporadio said:Keys, you’re bringing back fond memories from my late-teenage past! Remember the “remote” WOXR did New Year’s Eve (1973) when “the balls fell from the Water Tower” in Uptown Oxford... the “highest quality” broadcast of Fantasia from a Sony reel-to-reel directly plugged into the transmitter several miles out of town... Remember the fall-1973 “conversion to FM stereo” that involved the construction of a “homemade” audio console in the WOXR studios on High Street?
Yes... They PROULDLY failed to take themselves “seriously” as they wandered thru their loose playlist of “Baba O” by the Who followed by a salute to Dusty Springfield’s birthday and a presentation of “I Only Wanna Be With You” to celebrate. One day while on air, Rick Sellers was discussing the “phasing effect” often used in contemporary recording – then reminded his listeners of its original use – Miss Toni Fisher’s “The Big Hurt” from 1960 – then he happily played the well-worn 45-rpm single on the air – and yes it skipped! Then how about “The Dawg-Gone Bulletin Board” (a lost pet report) certainly followed by a Led Zep tune! They “got away” with these “transgressions” for only one valid reason – THEY WERE REAL – and respected their listeners as such – and those listeners knew it – and respected them!
I was at Rick’s marriage to his first (and very beautiful) wife Wendy... And after many years of “disconnect”, I reunited with him by phone on the evening he learned of her prognosis of terminal cancer. He was working in Cedar Rapids as the PD of 600 WMT AM. I was an owner who was building an FM upgrade, and called to “talk processing” with him. My, how the conversation became solemn. There’s NO finer person – and no finer radio guy than “Rick”.
I recognize many of the names you mentioned - GWA and Mark Fullerton (weird-beard in the afternoon). Mark informed me that Steely Dan was NOT a person – rather a group – embarrising but true! Another guy from memory was a MU part-timer named Ellis (Saturday and Sunday afternoons). He and I were in college at the same time and compared our Fraternity pledge stories. Yes, post-Viet Nam WOXR had an often-paddled “Frat Pledge” on-the-air!
Today, Rick owns a 1kw Class-D on 1450 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. I could place a well-engineered bet that he IS SUCCESSFUL in that endeavor. HORREY for these small stories, and thank goodness for the wonderful memories. Now can L.M. at CC recant a story like this from radio’s romantic past?
keys2 said:Remember the homemade jingle "Down on the farm......down on the farm.....dubbya OXR....down on the farm."
88.9 Miracle said:The rumor mill says that it is in process of being sold to allow 97X to return to Cincinnati.
keys2 said:hipporadio said:Keys, you’re bringing back fond memories from my late-teenage past! Remember the “remote” WOXR did New Year’s Eve (1973) when “the balls fell from the Water Tower” in Uptown Oxford... the “highest quality” broadcast of Fantasia from a Sony reel-to-reel directly plugged into the transmitter several miles out of town...
Wow. You recounted the essence of WOXR very well. Wacky, a little nerdy, and very hip. Remember the homemade jingle "Down on the farm......down on the farm.....dubbya OXR....down on the farm."...
But back to Rick Sellers. One day I called and won some tickets and when talking to Rick mentioned that I was very interested in radio. He invited me to the station, showed me around, let me hang out and meet some of the staff, and was just a genuinely nice guy. I'll never forget it. Mark Fullerton was the same way.
...And I still maintain that offering something a little offbeat is the only answer for the 97.7 signal even today...