WBCN 104.1 Boston crossing the radio rainbow bridge in August

Disney1fan2002

<font color=red>Like OMG the TF is SOO psyched to
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Jun 21, 2002
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The station has changed so much over the past fews years, but it was a great rock station in it's day. Mix 98.5 is moving to their frequency. 98.5 will then become an FM sports talk station.

I guess classic rock is a dying brand. :(
 
Yeah, Marie, remember back when 'BCN totally rocked and dominated the airwaves? I don't get why the owners let it go like they did. I still have it as one of my programmed selections on my car radio but rarely find anything there worth listening to. As for sports radio, I am not a listener. My DH likes to light a fire in the fire pit and listen to the Sox game. Listening to baseball on the radio is like watching paint dry. I don't see the appeal (as opposed to watching it on tv which can be entertaining). What I don't get is why the two stations are switching dial positions. Why wouldn't they stay where they are on the dial? Has anyone seen an explanation?
 
Why wouldn't they stay where they are on the dial? Has anyone seen an explanation?

I bet it's because 104.1 has a larger frequency. Not sure, but if Bicker is around, I'm sure he can explain. (in layman terms, bicker, please? ;) )
 
I also wonder if it has anything to do with Sox games being aired on 103.7 which is one station down on the dial from 104.1. Maybe they're afraid people would be able to easily switch back and forth. But, you know, Mix has also gone downhill in recent months. I used to land on Mix quite a bit when I was browsing stations and I rarely do lately. It seems like they are always talking and rarely playing any music, or music worth listening to. I have stations that are top 40 / pop, and I have stations that are classic rock. I also have a couple of stations I would call independent but I don't really know of any stations that play current hard rock. Am I just out of the loop? I would think there is still a market out there. My DD and her friends listen to some hard rock but it isn't music I ever hear on the radio. I have her add it to my running play list to get my adrenalin to kick in. Some of it is pretty good, I just don't know where I would ever find it on a radio station.
 

another station in the long list of stations, that can not survive in this economy, without howard stern.

Mikeeee
 
Oh, one of my favorite radio stations up here in ME not too long ago went to an FM sports talk station... are there really that many people around who want to listen to that stuff??? :sad2:
 
But, you know, Mix has also gone downhill in recent months. I used to land on Mix quite a bit when I was browsing stations and I rarely do lately. It seems like they are always talking and rarely playing any music, or music worth listening to.

No kidding! Mix completely ruined their morning show by replacing it with the 2 new people. Carson and Kennedy I think? They are TERRIBLE! I can't even listen to them. Hopefully they don't get rid of Back to the 80's Friday Night.

I can't stand Bill Costa on Matty in the morning so I haven't listened to Kiss in a long time. I hated Stern and don't like Toucher and Rich either on BCN. BCN is the station I listed to the most (usually from 10am on) but for not much longer I guess.

I miss radio from a few years ago. I used to love BCN, Kiss and Mix. Even 93.7 was good before it switched to MikeFM. Thank God you can listen to ipods in the car or there would be nothing decent to listen to.
 
An end of an era....I can still remember when Charles Laquadara (I know I spelled that wrong..) called me on my birthday one year (thanks to a friend who contacted him) and played some Elvis Costello for me. Remember the big mattress and Duane ....I doubt his last name will get through the filters! :rotfl:

Way back when we were in high school only the cool kids listened to WBCN..:music:

Jill
 
Way back when we were in high school only the cool kids listened to WBCN..:music:

Jill

In high school, only the burnouts listened to BCN...;) Just saying... LOL

I didn't start listening until I was in my early 20's. Charles was my favorite.
 
I bet it's because 104.1 has a larger frequency. Not sure, but if Bicker is around, I'm sure he can explain. (in layman terms, bicker, please? ;) )
The way I understand it, higher frequencies are less subject to atmospheric interference (but require more power* to drive the signal the same distance). So where fidelity is more important (i.e., music), a higher frequency is better. Where serving a broad area, cheaply, is more important (i.e., local sports), lower frequencies are better.

____
* Read: ¢o$t£¥ €£€¢tri¢it¥
 
I guess classic rock is a dying brand. :(
I think a lot of broadcast channels need to find new means of legitimizing their existence. Yesterday's profit models don't really apply anymore. So much of the value that radio stations (for example) used to provide to their owners has evaporated due to how there are so many other distribution channels for music, including. especially, a growth in the exploitation of illegal channels of distribution. Why wait around for WBCN to play your favorite, or introduce you to a new song that you might decide to buy (the latter being one of two principle means a radio station has to deliver value to its owners), when you can just go onto some music "sharing" service, and listen to whatever you want, whenever you want? I think the future of stations like WBCN is heavily tied to how effectively the RIAA is able to secure their assets. If they are unsuccessful, then I think it will very seriously hurt traditional music radio stations.

Instead, they'll need to offer something different: For example, HD radio offers [1] the promise of serving a greater variety of interests (because each HD radio channel can support two or three signals), for the same power output; [2] even better-than-FM fidelity (because digital tuners can better deal with multi-path issues -- when your radio receives the same signal a bunch of times, just a little off-time with each other, because the signal bounced off of different obstacles on its way to you); as well as [3] textual data (which can be used by devices to feed applications on the devices, such as a way of ordering a song you're listening to). Satellite radio offers similar advantages (but requires a subscription fee). And as it is being introduced, it fosters lots of economic activity (which radio stations may be able to share in, in some ways), because consumers need to buy new devices (however, once HD radio is the norm, and everyone has one, that advantage evaporates).

Of course, the new sports-talk radio station avoids the problems entirely. First, the talk part is (literally) cheap. No licensing fees to pay. The action takes place in a studio, so production is less expensive than a location broadcast. And there is no competing alternative channels for distribution. The sports broadcasts incur a licensing fee, of course, but I've seen sports-talk stations milk a single three hours live sporting event for practically a whole day's worth of programming! :) And since, for sporting events, the product's value is highest while it is live, there is little fear that piracy will undercut its value by drawing away listeners.
 












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