The jock-talk format targets men ages 25-54 and figures
compiled by Aribtron, which surveys radio listenership, show that there was a
mammoth decline — 58 percent — in market share in the format over the past
year.
According to the statistics, the three St. Louis sports stations
— WXOS 101.1 FM, KFNS 590 AM and KXFN 1380 AM — combined in January 2012 to
draw 13.5 percent of the estimated 549,100 men in the market in that age
bracket. That’s about 74,000 listeners.
This January, their combined market share staggered to 5.6
percent. And because there were about 17,000 fewer men in the target audience
than there were a year earlier, total sports-radio listenership was just under
30,000 — a whopping 60 percent loss.
The crash comes despite a notable year locally in sports.
The Cardinals followed their miracle comeback run to the World Series title by
falling one game short of returning to the Fall Classic, the Blues had a
breakout year, there was much hoopla surrounding the Rams’ hiring of Jeff
Fisher as coach then a significant improvement on the field. And there was
Missouri’s bold move to the Southeastern Conference.
St. Louis broadcast historian Frank Absher, who has worked
on the air, behind the scenes and has taught journalism at St. Louis
University, says the point of “too much’’ finally has arrived.
John Kijowski, who runs WXOS as well as Hubbard Radio’s
other St. Louis outlets, attributes the decline in part to abnormalities in
gathering listenership data. He points out that many stations appealing to men
in other formats are down, too.
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