Re: WOXY Flippng to Spanish
Been listening quite a bit this week. After hearing WVKO, it's about what I expected from TSJ, but it still seems like a pretty unusual Spanish format.
Probably 50-60% of WOXY's playlist is Regional Mexican, but the rest of it is pretty much from the Latin Pop and Tropical formats. Latin Pop and Tropical are typically relatively close formats with a decent amount of crossover (think the differences between Top 40 and Rhythmic), but Regional Mexican is a very different format. Occasionally you might find a Regional Mexican station playing a handful of pop or bachata tracks, or a Latin Pop station might play a few Regional banda tunes, if they're not too far of a stretch for the main format. But a full-on hybrid is very unusual, from what I've seen -- it would be akin to an English-language hybrid of Top 40 and Country. And it seems that just about any tune that's a current or recurrent relative hit on the Regional, Latin Pop, or Tropical charts (save for the handful of English-language crossovers) is fair game.
The variety is great. But I haven't decided if this is smart programming (trying to reach nearly the entire Latino community, given they're the only game in town), or "throw it to the wall and see what sticks" programming. I'm kind of leaning toward the latter. But I guess TSJ has done more research than I have.
In any case, I'm enjoying the variety and wish them success.
Or it could just be that they used a template and haven't replaced all the English words on it yet.
Been listening quite a bit this week. After hearing WVKO, it's about what I expected from TSJ, but it still seems like a pretty unusual Spanish format.
Probably 50-60% of WOXY's playlist is Regional Mexican, but the rest of it is pretty much from the Latin Pop and Tropical formats. Latin Pop and Tropical are typically relatively close formats with a decent amount of crossover (think the differences between Top 40 and Rhythmic), but Regional Mexican is a very different format. Occasionally you might find a Regional Mexican station playing a handful of pop or bachata tracks, or a Latin Pop station might play a few Regional banda tunes, if they're not too far of a stretch for the main format. But a full-on hybrid is very unusual, from what I've seen -- it would be akin to an English-language hybrid of Top 40 and Country. And it seems that just about any tune that's a current or recurrent relative hit on the Regional, Latin Pop, or Tropical charts (save for the handful of English-language crossovers) is fair game.
The variety is great. But I haven't decided if this is smart programming (trying to reach nearly the entire Latino community, given they're the only game in town), or "throw it to the wall and see what sticks" programming. I'm kind of leaning toward the latter. But I guess TSJ has done more research than I have.
In any case, I'm enjoying the variety and wish them success.
Actually the stream is running directly on their homepage. The streaming options links are screwed up, though; they'll need to fix those.2ndsout said:While they may have the means to stream...clicking on any of the streaming options on their page, for me; returned a 404 link "Page not Found".
A couple possibilities. I've noticed quite the presence of English on a few Spanish radio station websites. A lot of younger Latinos are bilingual or speak sort of a "Spanglish" English; it may be a pull for that demographic.2ndsout said:If it's a full Spanish station, then why are some of the things on their current homepage in English? Dumb question, I know.
Or it could just be that they used a template and haven't replaced all the English words on it yet.