Interesting/disturbing/humorous thread over at the Illinois Airwaves board about the station:
http://b4.boards2go.com/boards/board.cgi?&user=ilradio/
http://b4.boards2go.com/boards/board.cgi?&user=ilradio/
TriStateRadio said:OMG!! ;D
Withers is a big whig in the NAB right? how is that possible? must have more money than sense?
What time is that country show on the air? I've got to hear this....
TriStateRadio said:Word on the street is that Withers is very unhappy with the financial results of WYNG sofar and big changes are coming. My question is what did he expect from a dying community in south eastern illinois. He gave up ESPN radio and at least some respectibility in the metro Evansville book for what - no book (down 2.7) and lack of agency money in the future. Not a very smart move.
TriStateRadio said:???
I listened Saturday morning. What a train wreck. I know it was with a remote broadcast and the like, but is that the tinny singing they have every Saturday morning? How does that blend with the format the rest of the week.
It appears to me that 94.9, as an entity, would have been better served to stay ESPN radio and go for other repeaters, etc. More saleable?
Still don't understand, but hey, what do I know - maybe it makes sense if the dollars are there...
radiorob2.0 said:1330, as it is, won't make sense, unless you find a place to move the array. The frequency was one of many AM's that signed on after WWII. Many of these stations had to utilize directional antenna systems so they all could fit. 1330 is non-directional during the day and directional at night. The problem is when they designed the night signal pattern it was aimed towards downtown while east of 41 and Newburgh wasn't a concern. Green River Road was at one time farmland. Everything changed as growth moved east and 1330 would disappear at sundown. It's cost prohibitive to do all the things needed including engineering studies, land acquisition for a new array, building of towers and burying a ground system for the station to have a competitive signal again.