View Single Post
  #188   Report Post  
Old July 27th 08, 12:32 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
Brenda Ann Brenda Ann is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 855
Default (OT) : Energy for a Strong America and a Healthy US Economy


"David Eduardo" wrote in message
...

"Brenda Ann" wrote in message
news

"David Eduardo" wrote in message
...

Progressive does well in one market, Portland, but still does not beat
KEX even though it is on a better signal.


How do you get a "better signal" than KEX? 50KW that can be heard over
most of western Oregon and SW Washington all day long, and is still the
best signal in the metro area at night.. and don't talk to me about
contours,


The "new" 620 signal, day and night, conforms much better to the MSA,
which is what radio ratings, sales and survival are about. KEX, on a much
higher frequecy, does similarly by day, but at night the protection
requirements make it less viable in the metro than KPOJ on the supoerior
620 channel with a less severe pattern.

I've lived in Portland most of my life, and know very well which signals
are best in which areas. (the old KISN 910 was easily the worst nighttime
signal in the area, and didn't come close to covering it's market at
night. Still, it was, for a very long time, in the top three stations in
the market, even though there were problems on many radios with IF
doubling causing interference to their signal...)


That was in the 60's (till Don Burden lost the license) when the metro
area had a single county definition and the audience was measured by Pulse
and Hooper, not Arbitron. Boy, you had to go back 5 decades to find
irrelevant data on that one.


First, your math sucks. Five decades ago, I was 3 years old, and could not
have possibly cared less about radio. Next, KISN was #1-3 in the market
during the early to mid 1970's, when Star Broadcasting held the license,
before they started doing what Faux News, Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity do
freely and openly nowadays, and lost ALL their licenses.