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I'm not entirely sure who this guy is, but he looks at what happened last week in Corus' earnings (or lack of them) report and its recent request to the CRTC to ease their CanCon obligations, and openly wonders about the future of CHML in Hamilton.
He suggests - with no actual evidence - that the company may be planning to move its talk format to CING-FM, which I'm guessing would make AM 900 no longer viable. He cites what happened with a format flip from AM to FM in Calgary as a prior example.
I would hope that doesn't happen, but he does make the point that much of CHML's weekday programming is now coming out of Toronto - and not The Steel City. As it currently stands, their morning show runs from 5:30-9 AM, their afternoon offering goes from 3-6 PM, followed by a "Best Of" morning show highlights from 6-7 PM.
All the rest comes from somewhere else, whether it be the Alex Pierson, Kelly Cutrara and Dani Stover simulcasts or the western-based "The Shift" overnight. That means, out of a 24-hour day, only 6 1/2 hours are truly live and original. That is a very sad commentary on what used to be one of the great stations in the GTHA and I often wonder if whatever listeners they still have feel about all that out-of-town programming on what used to be a hometown heritage station.
Corus’s Financial Crisis and the Future of CHML
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RadioActive wrote:
the company may be planning to move its talk format to CING-FM, which I'm guessing would make AM 900 no longer viable. He cites what happened with a format flip from AM to FM in Calgary as a prior example.
Moving CHML to CING would be the best move, first it would get someone other than seniors to listen to the station and it would finally eliminate another redundant Hot A/C format. I actually hope this happens.
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As long as 95.3 continues to refrain from being an AM 640 repeater, there shouldn't be any issue with shutting down CHML.
Most importantly, 95.3 would be the home of the Ti cats, not the Argos (as best example for not being a Toronto radio station)
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With all the identical programming, moving CHML to 95.3 would take ratings from 640. 640 can't afford to have even one listener listen to 95.3.
The real answer is to move 640 to 95.3 and include some Hamilton-focused content.
However, there's a snag. The recent sudden shutdown of 1310 Ottawa, and the fact that it's been over a month since Corus said "something new" was coming to 99.1 Winnipeg ( ) it would appear that the CRTC has quietly told the broadcasters to cut this out and apply for these flips if they want them.
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Even when they are in simulcast during the day weekdays CHML has solid local news/weather/sports and traffic. Their local casts are superior to what Newstalk 1010 is doing. I don't have a big issue with the simulcasting with 640 and 980 CFPL. All of these communities have more in common than differences and it is not terribly difficult to have topics that apply to all. Same with CFRB and CKTB simulcasting Jerry Agar.
In the evening or all night with broader national or niche programming in more markets to me is not an issue. Very few in London really care to call in about the city council at 9pm or overnight. To get wound up about only 6.5 hours of local programming on CHML daily is a bit pointless. When they simulcast with 640 and 980 they are regional and all this is interspersed with local news, traffic and of course commercials/promo.
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With respect, I disagree. Their licence clearly states they must serve the residents in the city where they're based. Six hours or so of local programming with everything else piped in from someplace else doesn't fill that mandate, in my opinion. And it's not just discussions about Hamilton City Hall. There are a ton of issues that are unique to that area that they could address if they had actual local shows on to do it.
I will concede the economics may not be there for 24/7 programming, but if they want to be a satellite for 640, that's not what a Hamilton station should be doing. (It's even more inexcusable in London.) Endless discussions on Olivia Chow, changing the name of Dundas St. or talking about curing the problems of the TTC don't do much for the folks in Steeltown. I can't help but think that they deserve better. They have housing issues, homeless problems, local politics, increasing crime and more to deal with. I don't think it's going out on a limb to guess you won't hear about it on a Toronto radio station.
I have the same complaint about CFRB's Newstalk Tonight, which is almost entirely about Toronto issues, made worse when you consider it's heard in major cities like Montreal and Vancouver. No matter what he tries to do, Jim Richards always seem to deal with local issues on that show, despite knowing it's nationwide. It's a one-salary-covers-several-stations solution, so it's cheap, but why would a confrontation about tolling the Gardiner or the DVP mean anything to someone in Regina?
It's about saving money, not serving audience. And that's says a lot about the current state of radio under these large corporations. I don't expect it to change. But it deserves to be called out.
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Drop the regs and let the free market see where it goes. Protectionism has never lasted forever.
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For context of this discussion, CHML had a 0.9 in the last Hamilton book.
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RadioAaron wrote:
For context of this discussion, CHML had a 0.9 in the last Hamilton book.
Do you think a switch to FM would improve that a lot? In other words, is it the band or the format or both?
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RadioActive wrote:
RadioAaron wrote:
For context of this discussion, CHML had a 0.9 in the last Hamilton book.
Do you think a switch to FM would improve that a lot? In other words, is it the band or the format or both?
I do not. What we've seen in the US is that moves to FM have been good for all-news and sports stations, not as much for NewsTalk.
So far in Calgary, the AM is still out-rating the FM, but the combined share isn't any higher than before the simulcast.
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Serving the residents of Hamilton doesn't mean every show needs to be about Hamilton. That would make for a pretty boring station, same for 640 if it was always about Toronto.
CHML has solid local news/weather/sports/traffic all day, a morning and afternoon talk show which delve into things Hamilton. Also they are the radio voice of the Ti Cats, Hamilton's local CFL team with games on weekends. So they do serve Hamilton well during the day. Evenings, overnights and weekend slots for syndicated programming or national like Roy Green is fine. Don't see much of an issue here.
It is up to the hosts and producers to make their shows interesting to listeners in other communities as well as those in Toronto. I don't listen to either Kelly Cutrara, or Alex Pierson that much but when I have I didn't recall the topics were overly focused on Toronto or the mayor. As I remember the few times I listened they were talking more about Rob Ford, Justin Trudeau and federal politics.
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No it doesn't have to be all local. But it's more likely to attract an audience if they deal with more local issues than stories from a nearby city.
Imagine if some of AM640's topics for a 6-hour day was about traffic in Guelph, the Guelph mayor's latest controversy or a story about the housing shortage in Guelph. Even if they occasional mentioned Toronto stories, I don't think many would tune in. (Not that many are tuning in as it is.)
Local is all that a talk format has. If it's only there 6 hours a day, then there's not much point in tuning in. I'm not anti-CHML. I think they were a great station once. Not anymore. And that's Hamilton's loss.
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RadioActive wrote:
No it doesn't have to be all local. But it's more likely to attract an audience if they deal with more local issues than stories from a nearby city.
Imagine if some of AM640's topics for a 6-hour day was about traffic in Guelph, the Guelph mayor's latest controversy or a story about the housing shortage in Guelph. Even if they occasional mentioned Toronto stories, I don't think many would tune in. (Not that many are tuning in as it is.)
Local is all that a talk format has. If it's only there 6 hours a day, then there's not much point in tuning in. I'm not anti-CHML. I think they were a great station once. Not anymore. And that's Hamilton's loss.
Well the example is not very realistic and would never happen anyway. Being local all the time is not what would attract enough listeners.
What do you mean only six hours per day and not worth tuning in? Morning drive and afternoon drive are the two most important dayparts. Do you think people would listen to CHML radio 10 or 12 hours per day if it were all local? Even during their shared programming during the day they have local news/weather/traffic every half hour and local advertising throughout.
Good talk/news stations have a mix of local, regional, national a little international, sports, opinion and even some gossip, and hopefully some fun thrown in too.
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Well first P1 - If CHML is indeed on death's door, then piping in 640 simulcasts WILL NOT save it, especially when you can pull in 640 just fine in the Hammer. I lived in Stoney Creek up until 2014, so I should know. Besides, 640 is even more in the doldrums than ML is, so why would I want to listen to more of that? No disrepect to Kelly Cutrara and Dani Stover; they are talented broadcasters.
When CHML had more weight to throw around (even in the last decade), it was THE place to go for news on the CHCH layoffs by Channel Zero, Hamilton election coverage, news wheels and what have you. Bill Kelly often had people like Marvin Ryder from the De Groote School of business to discuss financial news from a Hammer perspective. In the evenings if I'm in the Hamilton area, I would prefer to have Scott Radley on as opposed to a 640 "clip show". By the way, referring to something that would be "all Hamilton" as "boring" sounds a tad misinformed on your part. No hard feelings I hope.
So it would seem by the process of elimination that I'm more aligned with RA's mindset. I really, REALLY want to be! However, I don't think a younger audience finds much use for a local talk format. I don't think most young people en masse REALLY care about "local! local! local!" as much as radio people do. As long as the influencer/YouTuber provides the content they are interested in, they're good. I'm 53, and the ones I follow most are in Des Moines, Houston, Jersey, Chicago and the UK. What I get from them is perfectly relevant to where I'm sitting in Richmond Hill.
So, where do I get local news? I guess from the twenty or so minutes I tune into 680. I think radio people want younger people to care about journalism the way we do, or did. You can't make somebody want something. They really don't care that Canadian news outlets are starving poor or that Facebook and Google might block their stories. The concern just isn't there. I even wish that I cared more, but I must admit it the concern for the future of Canadian media is occupying less real estate in my mind. It is a sad reality; I wish I could say something more supportive.
Last edited by Jody Thornton (October 30, 2023 7:22 pm)
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Good points Jody and no offence taken at all with your comments or RA's. The younger demos aren't listening to radio much here or anywhere. And since they didn't grow up with radio like we did they don't care about stations surviving. And really why would they? We can thank social media for a lot of this. Plus it is AM radio and anyone under 45 by and large has listened very little to AM.
CHML still is a good station, just different than what we use to know. Listening today their local newscasts are far superior to Newstalk 1010. At times the news readers on 1010 sound like kids with no experience. At least CHML newscasters can read and seem to put more effort into their time on air with local stories.
Do people care if Canadian media survives? I think in general most people still do, but I am not sure that some in the business or formerly in broadcasting actually care. I have noticed for a long time that there is a certain percent of media people that have a real chip on their shoulder and constantly complain and put down almost everything about media in this country. There is much to criticize but there is still much to celebrate as well. Too bad some never like to talk about any of the good things.
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I just posted in the hit the post thread about an experience I had with my son about 20 years ago , we were listening to an old air check of mine and he asked why I talked over the intro's to the songs. He said he would rather listen to a CD or his IPOD to hear the whole song. He is now 30, and never listens to radio, barely ever even watches live tv. That is today's world, playlists and streaming. I have said here many times, I loved being a DJ, but I have never regretted leaving the industry when I did.
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RadioAaron wrote:
With all the identical programming, moving CHML to 95.3 would take ratings from 640. 640 can't afford to have even one listener listen to 95.3.
The real answer is to move 640 to 95.3 and include some Hamilton-focused content.
However, there's a snag. The recent sudden shutdown of 1310 Ottawa, and the fact that it's been over a month since Corus said "something new" was coming to 99.1 Winnipeg ( ) it would appear that the CRTC has quietly told the broadcasters to cut this out and apply for these flips if they want them.
That's a good point. Now that 95.3 is simulcasting the 91.5 morning show from Kitchener/Waterloo. It does not make sense to me because 95.3's signal can be heard in the KW area and it was a waste of money. Same thing with KW's 105.3 Virgin. They simulcast the morning show from 97.5.Virgin in London. Also Y108's morning show is done from London too. I wonder how many people listen to these morning shows finding it irrelevant to their local area. Time will tell.
Last edited by haydenmatthews14 (November 1, 2023 1:13 am)