But it was hard to argue with the numbers. Smyth told Jon
Chesto at bizjournals.com the that plunge in ratings for WTKK over recent years
prompted him to start seriously considering dropping the station’s talk format
as long ago as last spring. Those discussions eventually led to the Braintree
company’s decision to switch from talk to a rhythmic adult contemporary music
format earlier this month, branding it as Hot 96.9.
Smyth says WTKK vaulted into the top five stations in the
Boston market for the key 25-54 demographic not long after the talk format was
introduced in 1999.
But those strong ratings didn’t last. Smyth says WTKK
dropped out of the top 10 in the past two years, and showed no signs of
recovering. He cites a number of factors, including the emergence of CBS
Boston’s 98.5 The Sports Hub, which drew a number of male listeners away.
So Smyth sought a music format, one that wouldn’t compete
with his company’s existing lineup of Boston-area stations — Magic 106.7, 105.7
WROR, Country 102.5 and Radio 92.9.
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