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Old October 2nd 07, 07:35 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?


David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a Midnight to 6 AM
ranker or table. In fact, many stations in large metros with lots of shift
workers consider the prime morning drive time to begin at 5 AM, and they do
a 5 AM to 10 AM drive time table for sales.



If you have that information, please share. How many AM listeners are
there during the 8 to midnight hours?

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Old October 2nd 07, 09:16 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?


wrote in message
ups.com...

David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a Midnight to 6
AM
ranker or table. In fact, many stations in large metros with lots of
shift
workers consider the prime morning drive time to begin at 5 AM, and they
do
a 5 AM to 10 AM drive time table for sales.



If you have that information, please share. How many AM listeners are
there during the 8 to midnight hours?


Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners, cume listeners, MSA
listeners, DMA listeners?


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Old October 2nd 07, 11:05 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?

On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message

ups.com...





David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a
Midnight to 6 AM ranker or table.


If you have that information, please share. How many AM
listeners are there during the 8 to midnight hours?


Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners,
cume listeners, MSA listeners, DMA listeners?




I don't really care. Just pick some random market, 8 pm to midnight,
and AQH Share. I just want a rough estimate of how many spend their
evenings listening to AM.

Thank you.




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Old October 3rd 07, 12:02 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?

On Oct 2, 6:05 pm, SFTV_troy wrote:
On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:





wrote in message


oups.com...


David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a
Midnight to 6 AM ranker or table.


If you have that information, please share. How many AM
listeners are there during the 8 to midnight hours?


Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners,
cume listeners, MSA listeners, DMA listeners?


I don't really care. Just pick some random market, 8 pm to midnight,
and AQH Share. I just want a rough estimate of how many spend their
evenings listening to AM.

Thank you.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


All evening? Literally from 6:00pm to midnight, without interruption?
My guess is that very few people do this.

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Old October 3rd 07, 12:18 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?


"SFTV_troy" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message

ups.com...





David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a
Midnight to 6 AM ranker or table.


If you have that information, please share. How many AM
listeners are there during the 8 to midnight hours?


Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners,
cume listeners, MSA listeners, DMA listeners?




I don't really care. Just pick some random market, 8 pm to midnight,
and AQH Share. I just want a rough estimate of how many spend their
evenings listening to AM.


The standard daypart is 7 to Midnight.

Using the 6th largest city, Houston, as an example, between 7 PM and
midnight, the share of radio listeners using AM at night is 7.9% of all
radio users. As a percentage of all persons, whether using radio or not, it
is 0.6%. In 18-34 year olds, the share is 4.3% of radio listening and 0.4%
of all persons in that age group, whether listening or not.




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Old October 3rd 07, 12:21 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?



David Eduardo wrote:

"SFTV_troy" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message

ups.com...





David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message

There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a
Midnight to 6 AM ranker or table.

If you have that information, please share. How many AM
listeners are there during the 8 to midnight hours?

Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners,
cume listeners, MSA listeners, DMA listeners?




I don't really care. Just pick some random market, 8 pm to midnight,
and AQH Share. I just want a rough estimate of how many spend their
evenings listening to AM.


The standard daypart is 7 to Midnight.

Using the 6th largest city, Houston, as an example, between 7 PM and
midnight, the share of radio listeners using AM at night is 7.9% of all
radio users. As a percentage of all persons, whether using radio or not, it
is 0.6%. In 18-34 year olds, the share is 4.3% of radio listening and 0.4%
of all persons in that age group, whether listening or not.


Don't you ever tire of the BS, Edweenie?


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Old October 3rd 07, 12:37 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?

Houston (Houston,Texas) is the fourth largest City in
America.Houston,Mississippi, I have never been there before.I have been
to Houston,Texas before.I had to get the hell off of that fast traffic
expressway, Fast!, I dodged off into an old shopping mall area. They
drive like there is no tomorrow in Houston,Texas.They will run over you
if you don't look out!
cuhulin

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Old October 3rd 07, 10:58 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default HOW MANY people listen to Distant (100 mile) AM at night?


wrote:

Houston,Texas before.I had to get the hell off of that fast traffic
expressway, Fast!, I dodged off into an old shopping mall area. They
drive like there is no tomorrow in Houston,Texas.They will run over you
if you don't look out!
cuhulin



Don't drive like a snail. ;-) If the speed say 70 then that's what
you need to be doing (or even higher). It's an interstate highway,
not a local country road. It's meant for high-speed travel.

Nothing annoys me more than when I'm driving down I-95 and some yoyo
is doing 50. C'mon. Drive faster.

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Old October 3rd 07, 01:04 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
RHF RHF is offline
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Default d'Eduardo - The Fallacy Of All Your Corporate Media Numbers

On Oct 2, 4:18 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"SFTV_troy" wrote in message

ups.com...





On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message


roups.com...


David Eduardo wrote:
wrote in message


There is data for every hour of the day, but licensed only for use by
Arbitron subscribers. It takes a couple of clicks to get a
Midnight to 6 AM ranker or table.


If you have that information, please share. How many AM
listeners are there during the 8 to midnight hours?


Where? To what station? In what market? AQH listeners,
cume listeners, MSA listeners, DMA listeners?


I don't really care. Just pick some random market, 8 pm to midnight,
and AQH Share. I just want a rough estimate of how many spend their
evenings listening to AM.

-
- The standard daypart is 7 to Midnight.
-
- Using the 6th largest city, Houston, as an example, between
- 7 PM and midnight, the share of radio listeners using AM at
- night is 7.9% of all radio users. As a percentage of all persons,
- whether using radio or not, it is 0.6%. In 18-34 year olds, the
- share is 4.3% of radio listening and 0.4% of all persons in that
- age group, whether listening or not.

d'Eduardo, {Houstan Ain't Texas - It Is That Simple}

The Fallacy of all your Corporate Media Numbers is that you
Report about Numbers within the Metro-Area : While IMHO
most of the Late Night Radio Listeners Live Outside the
Metro-Area well beyond the 10 mv/m Contour.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallacy

Face It - You Have No Number That Is Valid and Meaningful
For This Newsgroup Of Avid Radio Listeners.

A Nation-Wide {Federally Funded} Study of All Rural Radio
Listeners is Required to Assess Their Unque {Distance}
Radio Listening Habits And Their Radio Information and
Entertainment Service Needs. - Conducted Jointly by the
FCC and Department of of Commerce.
{ It Ought To Be A Law }

I Ask Myself : What IBOC ?
All I See Is The Blinking Blue Light ! ~ RHF
In That Distant Land* Where IBOC Fears To Go :
Life Exists and Radio Listeners Live Beyond the 10mv/m Contour.
* Twain Harte, CA -USA-
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Old October 3rd 07, 01:33 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default d'Eduardo - The Fallacy Of All Your Corporate Media Numbers


"RHF" wrote in message
oups.com...
-
- Using the 6th largest city, Houston, as an example, between
- 7 PM and midnight, the share of radio listeners using AM at
- night is 7.9% of all radio users. As a percentage of all persons,
- whether using radio or not, it is 0.6%. In 18-34 year olds, the
- share is 4.3% of radio listening and 0.4% of all persons in that
- age group, whether listening or not.

d'Eduardo, {Houstan Ain't Texas - It Is That Simple}

The Fallacy of all your Corporate Media Numbers is that you
Report about Numbers within the Metro-Area : While IMHO
most of the Late Night Radio Listeners Live Outside the
Metro-Area well beyond the 10 mv/m Contour.



The Houston metro consists of fully 8 counties, and the figures don't vary
for the more outlying counties... they acutally go down because Houston does
not have any really good signal AMs at night.

I looked at the Casper WY market... AM listening 17%... only 12 stations in
the market, and not much more AM listening than LA, with 17% also.

The highly rural McAllen Brownsville market has 8.2% AM listening. Traverse
City / NW Michigan has 11%. Beckley, WV 9.1%. Palm Springs, CA, 7.8%. Victor
Valley, CA 6.2%.

Get the picture?

A Nation-Wide {Federally Funded} Study of All Rural Radio
Listeners is Required to Assess Their Unque {Distance}
Radio Listening Habits And Their Radio Information and
Entertainment Service Needs. - Conducted Jointly by the
FCC and Department of of Commerce.
{ It Ought To Be A Law }


Arbitron does every county of the US once a year, and AM listening in
non-regularly-rated counties is lower than in metros.




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