RadioStationDudeUSA said:
Ok a coupl of things I thought of here....
Maybe 1270 WILE went for so much because it includes land. Maybe St Gabriel plans to sell the land to help pay off the purchase, hence taking WILE Dark. Also, WILE could've been billing fairly well, which would help account for part of the sale price.
There are NO applications on file for WUCO to increase power.
Also, I dought even if they took WILE dark, would they be able to get enough of an increase/pattern change to be able to cover all of Greater Columbus with just a local like signal. If they are beaming those 500 Watts from 6 towers all west, away from Columbus now, shutting off just one station won't change a whole heckuva lot.
Also, how far is marysville from Columbus? They said their office will be in Columbus. They are going to maintain a local studio in Marysville with localstaffing M-F 9 to 5pm? I like how they say they will keep a local show at 4:30pm on Saturday, like that wil lsatisfy the local presence rule or the need for local programming.
Why dont they just save their money, sell WUCO and WILE and buy a bigger stick in Columbus??
The terms of the sale were listed, but I don't remember if any land was included. It would have to be a LOT of land to justify that price.
WILE billing well? Again, not enough to justify that price. Remember what it is and where it is. A 1 KW daytime AM in a small market like that with programming from a satellite dish isn't a big draw. Ever heard the old expression about little stations like that selling spots for "a dollar a hollar?" It's not far from the truth.
Closing WILE should allow them to accomplish plenty since that is the main signal they are protecting that is keeping them out of Columbus now. Boosting power to 5 or 10 KW will get them into Columbus just fine without having to protect WILE, and even better if they can put a lobe over the market. I haven't looked into it much yet, but there isn't anything else to the south or east in close range that would stop them from doing that from what I could tell.
By the way, I was behind a car a few days ago with a bumper sticker that said "Catholic Radio 1270 AM" without a call sign mentioned, so they are starting to put the word out.
Since the FCC keeps changing the Rules & Regulations, it's hard to tell what the current status is with studio location. I tried to look it up and came up with nothing but an outdated piece saying everything was under review and subject to change. Oddly enough, AM stations were still required to have their main studio within the city of license long after FM stations were let off the hook. An automatic exception was always made for AM stations that wanted to have their studio at their transmitter site. The reference I saw mentioned something about requiring all stations, AM & FM, to have their studio within 25 miles of the city of license, but again, it said it was under review. The date on it was 1998 or 1999. I couldn't find anything newer. I seriously doubt that the FCC would change the ruling to limit FM stations to 25 miles because there are so many that are 50 miles or more from their city of license. If anyone has any up to date information, please post it.
Your question about why didn't they buy a local signal was posed by me early on. Considering the amount of money they have tied up in WUCO and the purchase of WILE, plus the additional $2 million or so that they project for a power increase, it seems like they could have picked up WVKO easily for the same amount or maybe even less.