In the topic below about the Capitol Theatre I mentioned how I think that the theatre can be a winner if managed right.
Someone else agreed, but said Clear Channel wasn't doing enough with WWVA.
And I am looking at their schedule and you know what- I AGREE!
For those that don't know it, WWVA is a 50,000 watt AM.
But just look at this-
12 Mid-1:00 am Paid Religious Programming - This is one of the great AM stations of the country and they are selling out to preachers who aren't exactly Father Lenguin here. This is the sort of thing you'd expect at a small 1000 watt AM- but not a 50KW blowtorch.
1:00am-5:00am Truckin' Bozo - Okay- not a bad thing for the format and the area- but then again- if I'm driving a truck overnight I can always get this program on WLW.
5:00am-6:00am Wall Street Journal This Morning -Probably not so bad for a news and info station.
6:00am-9:00am Quinn and Rose - I'm told this is the ultimate cost-cutting move by Clear Channel- that Quinn and Rose are popular in Pittsburgh but in Wheeling people want local.
9:00am-11:35am Glenn Beck- I can take or leave this one.
11:35am-11:50am Paul Harvey
11:50am-11:55am WSJ / ABN Farm Report
11:55am-11:58am Ned Jarett's World of Racing
11:58am-12:00 Noon Consumer Reports
104.7 does the same thing with Harvey and company- I wonder why they don't just let Beck go.
12:00 Noon-3:00pm Rush Limbaugh - Good pickup for a news talk- but likely comes with Quinn, Beck, and who knows what other baggage.
3:00pm-7:00pm The Drive Home with Steve Novotney- Novotney's not a bad host but isn't George Kellas, either, who succeeds with a much worse AM signal and frequency.
7pm Monday Cruisin' with Captain Frank
7pm Tuesday Nascar Live with Eli Gold
7pm Wednesday Cyberman
7pm Thursday Nail Talk with Gary Sharp
7pm Friday Buckeye Sportsman
This is the sort of thing that kills WBGG- you never know what's coming on after Savran. Two nights a week this slot is sports, another night it's apparently internet talk, I have no idea what or who Captain Frank is, bottom line is 7-8 on weekdays on WWVA are a disaster.
8:00pm-12:00 Mid Paid Religous Programming - But no bigger disaster than this.
Hello? Nailers games? Pirates games? Michael Savage or a real, local, honest to goodness host?
What we have is a station with about four different formats- religious-sports-news/talk- and classic country.
WWVA should be the Ohio Valley's blowtorch- the way KDKA is in Pittsburgh and WTAM is in Cleveland. It literally can give that entire area a real identity to the rest of the east coast.
Instead, it is getting heat from a station with a 1600 AM frequency (check the ratings).
They've got to tidy up this format. If it was me, I'd go with a classic country format which really isn't heard anywhere else in the area and I think would pull in tons of listeners from miles around- give you an identity with the Jamboree, and pick up sports play-by-play like the Nailers and high schools to further the local identity.
The bottom line is if Clear Channel is operating this station like they are the Capitol Theatre, no wonder BOTH entities aren't doing as well as they should.
Someone else agreed, but said Clear Channel wasn't doing enough with WWVA.
And I am looking at their schedule and you know what- I AGREE!
For those that don't know it, WWVA is a 50,000 watt AM.
But just look at this-
12 Mid-1:00 am Paid Religious Programming - This is one of the great AM stations of the country and they are selling out to preachers who aren't exactly Father Lenguin here. This is the sort of thing you'd expect at a small 1000 watt AM- but not a 50KW blowtorch.
1:00am-5:00am Truckin' Bozo - Okay- not a bad thing for the format and the area- but then again- if I'm driving a truck overnight I can always get this program on WLW.
5:00am-6:00am Wall Street Journal This Morning -Probably not so bad for a news and info station.
6:00am-9:00am Quinn and Rose - I'm told this is the ultimate cost-cutting move by Clear Channel- that Quinn and Rose are popular in Pittsburgh but in Wheeling people want local.
9:00am-11:35am Glenn Beck- I can take or leave this one.
11:35am-11:50am Paul Harvey
11:50am-11:55am WSJ / ABN Farm Report
11:55am-11:58am Ned Jarett's World of Racing
11:58am-12:00 Noon Consumer Reports
104.7 does the same thing with Harvey and company- I wonder why they don't just let Beck go.
12:00 Noon-3:00pm Rush Limbaugh - Good pickup for a news talk- but likely comes with Quinn, Beck, and who knows what other baggage.
3:00pm-7:00pm The Drive Home with Steve Novotney- Novotney's not a bad host but isn't George Kellas, either, who succeeds with a much worse AM signal and frequency.
7pm Monday Cruisin' with Captain Frank
7pm Tuesday Nascar Live with Eli Gold
7pm Wednesday Cyberman
7pm Thursday Nail Talk with Gary Sharp
7pm Friday Buckeye Sportsman
This is the sort of thing that kills WBGG- you never know what's coming on after Savran. Two nights a week this slot is sports, another night it's apparently internet talk, I have no idea what or who Captain Frank is, bottom line is 7-8 on weekdays on WWVA are a disaster.
8:00pm-12:00 Mid Paid Religous Programming - But no bigger disaster than this.
Hello? Nailers games? Pirates games? Michael Savage or a real, local, honest to goodness host?
What we have is a station with about four different formats- religious-sports-news/talk- and classic country.
WWVA should be the Ohio Valley's blowtorch- the way KDKA is in Pittsburgh and WTAM is in Cleveland. It literally can give that entire area a real identity to the rest of the east coast.
Instead, it is getting heat from a station with a 1600 AM frequency (check the ratings).
They've got to tidy up this format. If it was me, I'd go with a classic country format which really isn't heard anywhere else in the area and I think would pull in tons of listeners from miles around- give you an identity with the Jamboree, and pick up sports play-by-play like the Nailers and high schools to further the local identity.
The bottom line is if Clear Channel is operating this station like they are the Capitol Theatre, no wonder BOTH entities aren't doing as well as they should.