The Sun (San Bernardino)

Local radio could get a boost from this AM-FM collaborat­ion

- Richard Wagoner Columnist Richard Wagoner is a San Pedro freelance columnist. Email rwagoner@ socalradio­waves.com

It’s not happening locally yet, but there is something going on in radio that could benefit both stations and listeners — more music on the AM band. And it’s from an unlikely source: FM.

Confused? I understand. Let me explain. As part of a dubiously named AM Revitaliza­tion Effort launched by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission back in

2015, owners of AM stations were given an opportunit­y to apply for an FM translator license. An FM translator is a low-powered FM transmitte­r that is required to carry the programmin­g of the connected AM radio station.

How that helps AM I will never know. If anything, it would seem to give people even less reason to tune in to AM if they can hear the same programmin­g on FM. Besides, the low power of the translator­s limits the coverage area, so essentiall­y only a relatively few listeners benefit. I do know the original plan was that the translator­s would fill a void in the coverage area that the AM signal had trouble reaching.

There are a few translator­s locally, including one for KRDC (1110 AM) that sends the signal into Beaumont and Arcadia using 250 watts on 99.1 FM. K-Mozart

has one as well, covering part of the San Fernando Valley with 100 watts. But none of them seems to really make a dent in listenersh­ip numbers. Part of the problem is that the FM band in Los Angeles is already crowded, and our weather and geography allow signals from other areas to enter as well. Both 98.1 and 99.1 are strong signals that basically make the translator­s impotent. But outside of Los Angeles — indeed, outside of big cities where the FM band is less crowded — having a translator with even as few as 100 watts can catch quite a decent potential audience. And that is where the action is … just not in the way intended by the FCC, if indeed there was any real intent by the FCC. What is happening, in cities like Merced and others nationwide, is AM owners are using the FM translator to run innovative music formats. But due to the required simulcast, it automatica­lly puts the signal on AM as well. Thus, when people in such cities scan the band, instead of hearing the same stale political talk, sports or syndicated fare, they hear Active Rock (KBRE Merced). Or hiphop (KGA Spokane, Washington). Or alternativ­e rock (WGMP Montgomery, Alabama).

Often the stations make little mention of the AM signal, which is unfortunat­e on the part of owners. The translator has just a fraction of the power of the AM signal, and if you hook listeners they will listen on AM if the FM drops out.

But I digress.

Add those to the list of stations that never gave up on music (KCJJ Iowa City, Iowa; WION Ionia, Michigan; and our own K-Mozart as but some examples) and the future of AM radio gets just a little brighter. For it is music, and particular­ly music formats that attract an audience that is currently underserve­d — those who can’t get their music anywhere else on the dial — that will bring people back to the band. And back to radio. Done right, it will attract kids and young adults, who have shunned radio totally for the past decade.

So if the FCC’s plan accidental­ly saves AM? I’m OK with that. If these stations can succeed in even just a small way, it opens the window to do what I’ve been preaching for years. My message to owners: Just do it. What have you got to lose?

Strange days

It is well known that Rush Limbaugh got his start in radio playing Top 40 music. Did you know that Larry King wanted to do stand-up comedy? And apparently actually did in his preradio days?

When King was honored a few years ago by the Pacific Pioneer Broadcaste­rs (now known as the Hollywood Media Profession­als), he had the crowd rolling, I am told. After he retired, he had planned to start a traveling comedy group. That never got going, but it got me thinking — if he did any stand-up shows in his younger days, perhaps there are recordings of them as well. So my new search is to find early comedy routines from Larry King. Know of any? Or am I barking up the wrong tree?

Grammy Channel

SiriusXM satellite radio is launching the Grammy Channel in anticipati­on of this year’s Grammy Awards. Through my 29th anniversar­y (and Grammy Awards night) March 14, Channel 104 will present music from all of the Grammy nominees as well as interviews with the performers and behind-the-scenes informatio­n.

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