Bill Whyte filled in for an hour on WSM-AM during the afternoon yesterday- sounded great... he was #1 in mornings in Cincinnati on WUBE for a long time.... great talent....he is missed...
sweet sour Jerry said:Bill Whyte filled in for an hour on WSM-AM during the afternoon yesterday- sounded great... he was #1 in mornings in Cincinnati on WUBE for a long time.... great talent....he is missed...
ChiefEngineer said:Liked Bill on WFMS in Indianapolis.
Too bad WSM has fewer listeners than Mexican formatted WMGC 810 in Murphrysboro.
True, But we all know what it means. A Spanish Formatted Station. Which in the U.S would likely target Mexican Americans.DavidEduardo said:ChiefEngineer said:Liked Bill on WFMS in Indianapolis.
Too bad WSM has fewer listeners than Mexican formatted WMGC 810 in Murphrysboro.
"Mexican" is not a format, it is a nationality.
DavidEduardo said:ChiefEngineer said:Liked Bill on WFMS in Indianapolis.
Too bad WSM has fewer listeners than Mexican formatted WMGC 810 in Murphrysboro.
"Mexican" is not a format, it is a nationality.
ChiefEngineer said:DavidEduardo said:ChiefEngineer said:Too bad WSM has fewer listeners than Mexican formatted WMGC 810 in Murphrysboro.
"Mexican" is not a format, it is a nationality.
No, the format IS Regional Mexican. Not a snub or offhanded comment. Look up the format. This IS what they call it. Not Hispanic, Salsa, Latino, etc.
LibertyNT said:True, But we all know what it means. A Spanish Formatted Station. Which in the U.S would likely target Mexican Americans.DavidEduardo said:"Mexican" is not a format, it is a nationality.
ChiefEngineer said:If they are more likely to listen to English speaking stations, or even English Regional, maybe there isn't anything worth listening to in English so they reverted.
Randy Bell said:"poorly executed Regional Mexican"?
Hmmm, Bucky. Presumably, you mean that in the broadest sense. How many English speaking run promos with a reverb setting of 10+, sonovox and shotgun jingles, a sound that is compressed to a point that it displays a straight horizontal line on an oscilloscope and have a core audience that actually cares about what their (key word: THEIR) station is saying, much less playing?
If the description sounds vaguely familiar, then you would be correct. WMGC bears a strikingly strong resemblance to an overly-produced top 40 from 1965. Which, ultimately, is a good thing. When I listen to WMGC, I always snicker because it sounds so retro. But, then again, no one calls to complain about the reverb or the listener requests or the somewhat lengthy talk sets by the jocks. WMGC is a successful example of what radio used to sound like. In short, perhaps we could all learn something from history.
Randy - I had no clue they sounded that way! Wow. That reminds me of stations in Texas in the late 70's and early-mid 80's. I will check that out. That's pretty cool. Having zero knowledge of the format, is that
sound common elsewhere? It's gotta make for some interesting listening.
Tibbs2 said:Randy - I had no clue they sounded that way! Wow. That reminds me of stations in Texas in the late 70's and early-mid 80's. I will check that out. That's pretty cool. Having zero knowledge of the format, is that
sound common elsewhere? It's gotta make for some interesting listening.
DavidEduardo said:Remember that in Latin America, among the most popular... and financially successful music formats include some or all music in English. Depending on age appeal, this may be CHR/pop, rock, or AC material but all these types are widely heard across Latin America.
radio30 said:Really sad to see this once Great Station die a slow and painful death... This is what can happen when a hotel company, instead of real broadcasters, get control of a heritage radio property.
radio30 said:This is what can happen when a hotel company, instead of real broadcasters, get control of a heritage radio property.
DavidEduardo said:This is a broadcast company that got into the hotel and entertainment business.