scottwmro said:
You being here in Nashville at WMAK was over 30 years ago.
I wasn't in Nashville... our company's most important station, revenue-wise, was. Gerry Adaams was GM. I was at other stations in the company, including Birmingham, which soon outbilled Nashville. But, since we had regular manager's conferences and meetings, I was very familiar with the dynamics of the market.
WSM-AM was not full time country in the 70's.
Nobody said they were.
Where you’re getting your numbers from, who knows, and who cares.
They are coming from the most reliable and widest used source inside the industry.
I'm just telling you that WSM-AM is not going anywhere. You’re not the only one that has said that WSM-AM is fading out into the sunset. Others have said it too. The country music industry will keep it alive.
The highly unprofitable does not have the interest and wherewithal to do anything about a station nearly nobody listens too. If they care about something, it is stations like KKGO in LA, where over one million listeners tune in, not WSM where less than 50,000 people, mostly over 60 and not in the music buying demos, still tune in.
Not just Hispanics, but when any human being that can't find what they want to hear on FM will go to AM.
No, they won't. People under a certain age barely know AM exists.
Now I've been around WVOL since 1981. It's always been a Black Station, even during the times that Cal Young, R.W. Rounsaville, and Lew Dickey owned it, who were all white men. They are NOT Rhythmic Oldies!
The station itself advised Arbitron on its SIP that the format is "Rhythmic Oldies." Since you don't own it, I will take their word for it.
I listen to the station almost everyday, and stop in from time to time. On Saturday's, all day long, it's Blues at WVOL, just like WDIA is. WVOL has been on almost as long as WDIA. When it comes to WVOL, I know what I'm talking about because I've worked there! It WAS a black station when you were at WMAK! For a long time in the 80's, I was the only white jock there. Sam Howard owned WVOL when I worked there.
Out of respect of others, I'm not going to argue with you.
WVOL is no more like WDIA than a guppy is like a whale. A station with nearly no listening hardly compares with a major force in Memphis radio that is at or near the top consistently, even today.
WVOL bit the radio dust when WQQK went to an r&b format... and that
was nearly 30 years ago