Felger leaving ESPN Boston
Dan.Strassberg
dan.strassberg@att.net
Sun Jul 13 11:20:43 EDT 2008
However, I take exception to characterizing 890/1400 as low-powered.
890 runs 25 kW-D from super-efficient half-wave towers. The daytime
signal is truly the equivalent of 50 kW! (Check out the pattern RMS,
which exceeds 2000 mV/m @ 1 km; the minimum for a 50 kW ND Class B AM
is 1992 mV/m.) Yes, the transmitter site in Ashland is kind of far
from Boston but the very narrow pattern sends the equivalent of about
350 kW ND to the east. And yes, the 6 kW night signal provides only
half the RMS of the daytime signal and the NIF value of 12.5 mV/m is
not great, but the station does deliver a listenable nighttime signal
to a large part of the market. (The night signal toward Boston is
equivalent to more than 67 kW ND.) Many people seem intent on "talking
down" the 890 signal, but the facts simply don't justify the
bad-mouthing.
-----
Dan Strassberg (dan.strassberg@att.net)
eFax 1-707-215-6367
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Tomm" <nostaticatall@charter.net>
To: "Dan.Strassberg" <dan.strassberg@att.net>
Cc: "Kevin Vahey" <kvahey@comcast.net>; "(newsgroup)
Boston-Radio-Interest" <boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org>
Sent: Sunday, July 13, 2008 10:21 AM
Subject: Re: Felger leaving ESPN Boston
> But for the most part, 890 doesn't appear in the Arbs and when they
> do, it's barely above the minimum share. ESPN will stay there until
> a viable FM sports alternative comes around--and then they're gone.
> ESPN does own some FM affiliates...Dallas comes to mind off the top
> of my head. For the most part their O&O's are on AM, but there are
> quite a few non-owned affiliates on FM, and that number will
> increase in the future.
>
> The industry is moving toward posting, which means stations (and
> networks) are becoming more accountable to advertisers and agencies.
> Ad buyers want quantifiable results, and just clearing spots on a
> low- powered AM that gets no ratings isn't going to cut it in the
> next few years. Tang and the Worldwide Leader may go way back, but
> business is business. If ESPN can get their spots cleared on a
> full signal FM in a sports crazed major market like Boston, they'd
> jump at the opportunity.
>
> -Dave Tomm
> "Mike Thomas"
>
>
> On Jul 13, 2008, at 6:55 AM, Dan.Strassberg wrote:
>
>> I suspect you are grossly underestimating the financial support
>> that
>> ESPN providies to Jessica Tang and Co. ESPN needs a Boston
>> affiliate
>> almost as much as they need WEPN in New York (and now Central NJ
>> and
>> eastern Long Island) and WPEN in Philadelphia. The issue is spot
>> clearances--not ratings. As long as Disney and ESPN remain afloat,
>> I
>> think 890's presence as a sports signal here remains assured. If
>> the
>> station is able to garner measurable ratings from time to time,
>> it's
>> just gravy.
>>
>> Ms Tang and ESPN go back a long way; she managed a Pittsburgh
>> sports
>> station that, I believe, was an ABC O&O. Perhaps if 92.9 or 104.1
>> were
>> doing sports talk, ESPN's allegience in Boston might flip, but I
>> wouldn't count on it. Between Radio Disney and ESPN, the Mouse
>> seems
>> committed to AM.
>>
>> -----
>> Dan Strassberg (dan.strassberg@att.net)
>> eFax 1-707-215-6367
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Tomm"
>> <nostaticatall@charter.net>
>> To: "Kevin Vahey" <kvahey@comcast.net>
>> Cc: "(newsgroup) Boston-Radio-Interest"
>> <boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org>
>> Sent: Saturday, July 12, 2008 9:23 PM
>> Subject: Re: Felger leaving ESPN Boston
>>
>>
>>> 890 was toying around with local programming before Felger's show
>>> during the Celtics playoff run with a couple of guys who
>>> previously
>>> bought time from WWZN. My guess is that they bought the airtime
>>> from 890 as well. Felger's old slot may be an attractive option
>>> for Lobel & Bell, but at this point the station would probably
>>> rather sell them the time than hire them on. That station is a
>>> sinking ship, and Felger is jumping off while he has the chance.
>>>
>>> WEEI is due for some real competition, and considering the holding
>>> pattern both 104.1 and 92.9 have been in recently, either one
>>> could
>>> easily pull the trigger at anytime. Landing Ordway would be a
>>> major building block, and it's almost like WEEI is preparing to
>>> lose him when his deal runs out later this year. All of their
>>> front line talent, D&C, Dale Arnold, Michael Holley and Pete
>>> Sheppard have signed long term deals in the last several months.
>>> Everyone but Ordway. Considering the beating Entercom stock has
>>> taken recently along with the Sox rights fees and Howie's huge
>>> new
>>> deal, it might be hard for Julie & Jason to pony up the package
>>> to
>>> keep Glen in the fold.
>>>
>>> You have to wonder if Felger working for the "WEEI Website" is
>>> keeping him in reserve for an eventual Ordway departure...and away
>>> from a potential FM sports talk competitor. As Sean mentioned,
>>> Rob
>>> Bradford is also signed on for web work. It looks like WEEI is
>>> building up their web presence to become the local "sports leader"
>>> online as well. As big as WEEI is getting, eventually one of the
>>> underperforming FM's in the market will want at least a part of
>>> the
>>> action. With Ordway's contact in play this fall, I'd be shocked
>>> if
>>> one or both of them didn't make a serious run at him. If either
>>> Greater Media or CBS Radio can lure him away, it's game on.
>>>
>>> Dave Tomm
>>> "Mike Thomas"
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jul 12, 2008, at 6:28 PM, Kevin Vahey wrote:
>>>
>>>> I heard at the ballpark that Bob Lobel and Upton Bell are
>>>> pitching
>>>> a
>>>> brokered show around town. Lobie has enough friends that they
>>>> could
>>>> clear enough to make it worth the bother.
>>>>
>>>> The only way another sports station can thrive in Boston is to
>>>> hire
>>>> Ordway away from WEEI. It is no secret that Glenn went ballistic
>>>> when
>>>> he found out what Howie was making after he had been told he was
>>>> the
>>>> highest paid person in the entire Entercom chain.
>>>>
>>>> But Ordway would never go to a weak signal like 890 no matter how
>>>> much
>>>> cash was on the table. It would have to be either 92.9 or 104.1.
>>>>
>>>> On 7/12/08, Bob Nelson <raccoonradio@mail.com> wrote:
>>>>> http://shots.bostonsportsmedia.com/2008/07/developing-felger-gone-
>>>>> from-espn-890-and-herald-set-to-join-weeicom/
>>>>>
>>>>> ESPN Boston maintains they will continue local programming, with
>>>>> afternoon
>>>>> and midday shows, but they
>>>>> could not come to terms with Mike Felger who will join WEEI's
>>>>> website. The
>>>>> station has occasionally
>>>>> shown up in the ratings but cannot match the ratings or clout of
>>>>> 'EEI. Who
>>>>> knows how long they will continue
>>>>> as sports; well, at least they have things like Sunday Night
>>>>> Baseball and
>>>>> the All Star Game.
>>>>>
>>>>> In a town like this, a powerful sports talker like WEEI has no
>>>>> time to run a
>>>>> mostly-ESPN-fed format (WEEI's overnights are done by Fox
>>>>> Sports instead) , so ESPN turns to a smaller signal to do mostly
>>>>> national,
>>>>> some local
>>>>> programming. And now they lose Felger.
>>>>>
>>>
>>
>
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