|
Departments
Advertising & PR News
Marketing News
TV & Cable News
Radio News
Magazine News
Newspaper News
Internet News
Retailing News
Consumer Research
Expenditure Data
People in the
News
Industry News
Company Bios and
Background
Register
Here
STAY IN-THE-KNOW!
Are you getting the latest industry news when it happens via e-mail?

Click here for free delivery of the Target Market News Bulletin
You'll receive news of breaking stories, exclusives,
updates and headlines on the latest developments in African American
marketing and media
Black Stats
Frequently requested
data on African American consumers
Black Buying Power:
$679 Billion (2004)
Black U.S. Population:
38.3 million
Top Five Black Cities
- New York
- Chicago
- Detroit
- Philadelphia
- Houston
Top Five Black Metros:
- New York-New Jersey
- Washington-Baltimore
- Chicago-Gary
- Los Angeles
- Philadelphia
Top Five Expenditures:
- Housing 110.2 bil.
- Food 53.8 bil.
- Cars/Trucks 28.7 bil.
- Clothing 22.0 bil.
- Health Care 17.9 bil.
Click here for more stats from "The Buying Power of
Black America."
______________________
Get quick access to key
U.S.
Census
Bureau Data
Click here to go to African-American Census Bureau
data
_____________________

Copyright
© 2006 by
Target Market News Inc.
All rights reserved
Business address:
228 S. Wabash Ave.
Suite 210
Chicago, IL 60604
t. 312-408-1881
f. 312-408-1867
info@targetmarketnews.com
|
New York’s WLIB to
replace talk format with gospel after Air America exit
By
David Hinckley
N.Y. Daily News
(August 21, 2006) WLIB (1190 AM) is switching from the liberals to the
Lord. After 29 months as the flagship station for the progressive talk
network Air America, WLIB will become a full-time black gospel music
station on Sept. 1.
It will be "music-intensive," says Vinny Brown, operations manager of
sister station WBLS (107.5 FM), "but will not exist in a vacuum, just
playing songs. It will be heavily involved with the community, because in
many ways the church is the community."
Vice president/general manager Deon Levingston says while the "Praise and
Inspiration" format will not have talk shows "per se," some shows "will
focus on issues in a way that's compatible with the music."
He cited as an example Imhotep Gary Byrd's Sunday morning "Express
Yourself" on WBLS, and suggested there could be some specialty shows on
weekends. Byrd's current early-morning talk show on WLIB, however, will
disappear.
"This will be a 24-hour gospel format," says Brown.
The station will kick off with all music, then after a month or so will
add hosts. No names have been announced yet, but Levingston says, "They
will be people listeners will recognize. As with WBLS, we want
personalities that are as strong as the songs they're playing."
Putting music on AM band is challenging in 2006, but Levingston says the
fact WLIB will have this format to itself will help. The city hasn't had a
full-time black gospel station since WWRL (1600 AM) switched to soul
oldies in April 1997.
Perhaps ironically, WWRL will pick up Air America programming on Sept. 1.
Brown says the success of specialty shows helped convince WLIB's parent
Inner City broadcasting the gospel audience is there, and he noted gospel
music itself has broadened its base lately.
"Sometimes 'BLS has had six or seven gospel songs in rotation," he says.
"You have core gospel artists like Shirley Caesar and Hezekiah Walker, but
then you also have an increasing number of crossover artists like Kirk
Franklin or Yolanda Adams.
While much of the audience is likely to be women, Brown says gospel today
"isn't just for devout churchgoers. Is has a wide range of listeners."
Brown said WLIB will focus on mainstream gospel though "there will be a
presence" of specialized sounds like choirs and quartets.
Levingston said the station plans to work with "and listen to" church and
community groups.
It's a gamble for WLIB to finance its own programming instead of reupping
with Air America or leasing airtime to another provider, particularly
since WLIB has often struggled for ad dollars.
But WLIB decided gospel was an up-and-coming format that would be stronger
than the two other major candidates Levingston says were considered:
oldies and country.
"At various times, each one of those three seemed to be the favorite," he
says. "But gospel is more compatible with the station's heritage and with
WBLS, where we think there's real synergy."
One format never seriously considered, says Levingston, was talk or
news/talk.
"That field is already too crowded," says Levingston. "With seven or eight
stations, it would just be too hard to establish a new one. Look at Air
America: Its ratings were lower than our old Caribbean format, and it
never got the advertising it needed to make money."
He acknowledged there is sentiment in the community for a "black talk"
station, but he said that in the end, Inner City felt gospel would provide
a better service.
Go to Target Market News
homepage
|

Click here to read more
________________________
The
African-American
Book Publishing Authority
Now
in its seventh year of publication, Black Issues Book Review is
the only nationally distributed magazine devoted exclusively to covering the
latest news and reviews on black books. BIBR also provides up-to-date news on forthcoming author
events, publications, conferences, shows and exhibits.
Want this issue? Get it with your new subscription.
Click Here
________________________
________________________
12th
Annual Edition Available
Latest
'Buying Power' report shows black consumers spending more on home life
As the American economy continues to move sluggishly,
African-American households are curtailing their spending in many
categories, including food, clothing and basic household items, while
investing more in home repair, home entertainment and consumer
electronics. Although they are trimming back, black consumers are still
spending more than their white counterparts on most of these products.
Story and statistics
continued
_________________________
SUBSCRIBE TODAY!

The trade publication for
in-depth coverage of Black
Consumer Marketing
and Media news
|