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Is Pat Kenny to Newstalk a game changer?

  • 31-07-2013 2:17pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    yes yes another thread, but hear me out. Does the exit of RTE Radio Ones flagship factual presenter (albeit a man in his 60s) signal a shift in the talk radio landscape?

    Myself, I guess it depends on the reactions of both stations, does RTE Radio attempt to keep the Today programme running with say Myles Dungan (who would leap at the chance you'd have to think) or will they take this exit as the opportunity to reshape the morning schedule? If so how? Less serious discussion and more fluffy music? Maybe shorter factual programmes
    a la BBC Radio 4?

    Meanwhile will NT seek to buttress this coup by upgrading Breakfast (read ditch Chris Donoghue) and see if they can attack Morning Ireland properly rather than offering merely "news lite".

    Might this move also attract other talents?

    Thoughts? :)


«1

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,139 ✭✭✭Red Crow


    No matter what people say Kenny does an excellent show and will bring a lot of listeners with him.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    Anyone? :(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,608 ✭✭✭themont85


    Well from my perspective I will probably start listening again. I ditched the station after listening for their first few years. Now I'm not the demo they're going after in fairness.

    This is the biggest move in Irish radio ever. Established star in an eestablished time slot.

    NT were never going to compete with Morning Ireland. MI is a brand which can weather producer and presenter change.

    Between Joe Duffy and Kenny for poaching and they have the better one. He'll bring people with him.

    In just 3 years RTE have lost their supremacy at 2fm and R1 for mid morning.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,892 ✭✭✭spank_inferno


    What if:
    Hook to morning slot
    Kenny for mid morning
    lunch show.
    Moncreif for some light stuff.
    Move Cooper over to the drive time slot.
    Off the ball' for sport.

    ...... Now that is a game changer that woulx have the closeted quango that is RTE pooping their pants.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,984 ✭✭✭ebbsy


    Pat Kenny is the only Radio 1 show I listen to, so for me it is a game changer.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,309 ✭✭✭✭Bard


    Having someone of Pat's stature and calibre moving from the national broadcaster to an independent commercial station certainly seems like a bit of a watershed moment to me... and indicates to me, in a positive way, that anything is possible in the business after all.

    RTÉ now know that they really need to rethink the way certain things are done in there. As Noel Curran said on Drivetime this evening, the playing field has been levelled;- RTÉ have to compete with the Independents but while only realistically being able to offer the same kind of salary levels... and rightly so.

    What interesting times we live in...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,109 ✭✭✭Skrynesaver


    What if:
    Hook to morning slot

    The notion of hearing that ravening loon as I grope towards conciousness is appalling, I suspect Pat will replace Hook when he goes/is pushed in the drivetime slot though Cooper is probably the best drivetime radio currently available.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,892 ✭✭✭spank_inferno


    The notion of hearing that ravening loon as I grope towards conciousness is appalling, I suspect Pat will replace Hook when he goes/is pushed in the drivetime slot though Cooper is probably the best drivetime radio currently available.


    Fair point... I'm no fan of Hooky either.

    I suppose if Ivan Yeats comes back to the breakfast it would make that line up stronger.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,286 ✭✭✭seligehgit


    Game changer for me,Pat Kenny is a first class broadcaster.His range of knowledge is excellent and has no equal when it comes to current affairs.Keep him away from the touchy feely interviews.


  • Registered Users Posts: 543 ✭✭✭CorsendonkX


    The notion of hearing that ravening loon as I grope towards conciousness is appalling, I suspect Pat will replace Hook when he goes/is pushed in the drivetime slot though Cooper is probably the best drivetime radio currently available.

    Who listens to him on a regular basis? Didn't his listeners increase? His best show is on Friday when his two co hosts spend the show correcting him. It's like listening to an idiot savant without the knowledge, the slightest connection to a topic and Hook shoots off on a tangent that we probably heard before or makes massive assumptions like his recent sermon on grammar and the decline in reading.

    Hook: "Children are reading less today than a 100 years ago"

    Guest: "But George more children know how to read than a 100 years ago..."

    Hook get's flustered and tries to bull his way along.

    He talks about poverty then in the next breath mentions his home in Foxrock or his latest tropical Holiday. I tuned over today and he was fawning over Pat Kenny.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 5,730 ✭✭✭europa11


    Game changer here too.

    The most likely response from RTE is to lose the dead-time slot that is 9-10, currently the domain of OMG Miriam, and keep things "heavy" after Morning Ireland, interspersing a bit of music here and there as Pat used to.

    btw, I presume NT don't have to bring along one of Pat's more annoying traits, that of acting the drunk uncle at a wedding and 'getting in on' with the young musicians, in particular the god-awful Appalachian folksy stuff that elicited more than one "Wow!" from him.

    Same goes for Senator Marie-Louise O'Donnell's appearances, another low point he could well drop......or preferably drop in a well.

    Either way, a good move by O'Brien. If anything this should shake things up out in Montrose.

    If Ronan Collins needs directions to LyricFM, I can help :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    If MLOD follows Kenny I'll be very disappointed to say the least.

    I'll whisper this there is a chance that rather than Newstalk raising its game, Kenny will be dumbed down, wonder if he has been given any guarantees from an editorial pov.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,443 ✭✭✭InchicoreDude


    Meanwhile will NT seek to buttress this coup by upgrading Breakfast (read ditch Chris Donoghue) and see if they can attack Morning Ireland properly rather than offering merely "news lite".

    Why ditch Chris Donoghue? Are his ratings not good? I find him to be the best morning radio dude to listen to (but I have no idea how popular his show is in comparison to others)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,698 ✭✭✭greenpilot


    mike65 wrote: »
    Anyone? :(

    Newstalk is too Dublin Centric, hardly anyone outside the Pale listens to it. Listening to it and their Ads one would think there is not another 3 million non Dubs in the Country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,543 ✭✭✭Conmaicne Mara


    Fair point... I'm no fan of Hooky either.

    I suppose if Ivan Yeats comes back to the breakfast it would make that line up stronger.

    I liked Ivan in the start but was happy to see him go in the end (nothing to do with his circumstances). He seemed to ramble incessantly, interrupt to talk shíte for the sake of it, and be ever so slightly obsessed with sex. Which is grand, when it happens the odd day, but he seemed to think it a great idea to do it every time he had a mic in front of him, got very boring very quickly for me.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,988 ✭✭✭constitutionus


    i think the scope is definetly there for a restructuring of the radio landscape.

    newstalk will definetly be moving their shows about to facilitate pat and i can see RTE having a hard time competing with him with a replacement so they may pull something out of left field and not even try - putting a totally differnt show on instead (though the smart money is on tubbs taking over)

    RTE will have to fill the slot so there will be monkeying about of their schedule too simply by dint of moving people about.

    should be fun and TBH this is the most exciting news on the radio front in decades. i for one cant wait to see how things pan out.

    :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,892 ✭✭✭spank_inferno


    greenpilot wrote: »
    Newstalk is too Dublin Centric, hardly anyone outside the Pale listens to it. Listening to it and their Ads one would think there is not another 3 million non Dubs in the Country.

    They started as a Dublin station before getting a national lisence granted.

    Since then they have made great efforts to broaden their appeal to the marsh-lands of beyond the Pale :p


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,165 ✭✭✭mrsdewinter


    Im genuinely excited about what this move means for Irish radio. But I have a quibble on the technical front. Marconi House will simply have to raise their game in transmission terms. I live in west Dublin and I can no longer tune my radio to Newstalk - about 2 years ago, Today FM dropped off the dial. If I - living inside the M50, smack bang in the middle of the demographic - am having trouble picking up a signal, how does Denis O'Brien expect the over-50s down the country to make the switch?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    Reception is grand "down the country", maybe Dublin is the issue. (btw your age has no bearing on the ability to get a signal)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭EdCastle


    Outside of Dublin, Newstalk isn't all that popular, Goodbye Pat Kenny!

    Maybe we'll get Tom Dunne back on Today FM now for an evening show, that would be a sweet move.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭EdCastle


    mike65 wrote: »
    Reception is grand "down the country", maybe Dublin is the issue. (btw your age has no bearing on the ability to get a signal)

    It's not all that great out further west of the Shannon.

    Most 50's and older wouldn't even know what Newstalk is.....RTE, Today FM, Midwest, Galway Bay and IRadio making inroads into the youth market are kings which covers the full demographic.....Newstalk rarely gets a mention.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    You'd have to suppose that Denis O'Brien will be rolling out a marketing campaign based around Kenny and whatever other changes are made in the next month. I expect to see billboards, radio spots and TV3 ads exclaiming the new era.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,730 ✭✭✭europa11


    mike65 wrote: »
    You'd have to suppose that Denis O'Brien will be rolling out a marketing campaign based around Kenny and whatever other changes are made in the next month. I expect to see billboards, radio spots and TV3 ads exclaiming the new era.

    Don't forget a few full page ads in The Indo, Sindo and Hedduld Mike.:D

    Not to mention more than a few magazine articles from the same stables, the publicity campaign should be massive.

    I expect many at this stage are looking forward to what RTE's response will be, now with talk of another defection in the air the Autumn schedules out in Montrose might prove very interesting......and with any luck, offering a chance for new faces to come through and replace some of the tired ones currently going through the motions out there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,125 ✭✭✭heybaby


    As much as I'd like to think pat's move to independent radio might be a game changer I think it's move of a one off exception than a game changer. Kenny felt he was being disrespected at RTE so this move to Newstalk is essentially a two fingers to the Montrose headhonchos. DOB would have bankrolled this 2 million euro move because of the high profile of the presenter in question. It will make Kenny the highest paid presenter on independent radio ever, but as I said i cant see the flow of talent out of RTE becoming the norm or Independent radio genuinely competing with RTE.

    My guess is RTE will put Miriam into pat's old spot, she's considered a heavy hitter, she's a household name and its a safe longterm option. She will go head to head with Pat and I reckon will win because of irish peoples' blind loyalty to RTE. Consider also the fact that many many people never change the dial on their radio from RTE, they turn on morning Ireland and it stays on RTE right throughout the day. I have already heard some people ask where Newstalk is on the dial?? You will literally have people who wont retune their radios despite wanting to listento pat, because they dont want the hassle of messing around with the dial, my aunt being one of them.

    If Pat's move is going to attempt to be a game changer then Newstalk need a heavyweight on breakfast and the resources to go with it. Now if Newstalk could poach Sean O Rourke from RTE to headline their breakfast show alongside Aine Lawlor / Rachel English ... now you're talking game changer.


  • Registered Users Posts: 40 Cathalibm


    I feel sorry for Tom Dunne. He has a good show between 10- 12, At least he still his sunday evening show for the moment. I bet he was seriously pissed when being told that he was being canned! I know that i would be. From listening to the radio while driving around dublin in the 10-12 timezone, there are only 2 serious options, tom on newstalk and kenny on radio 1.

    1 of those is now going on the 4th september. Personnelly im not a fan of kenny, find him to be a Gaybo lite for Dublin. He has no serious presence outside of Dublin. Looks like I'll be dusting off my cds to listen to them in the morning.

    On a side issue im finding myself listening less and less to Newstalk. Considering what they did to the Off the Ball crew a few months ago & now to Tom Dunne it looks like the owners have no loyalty to the presenters and listeners.:confused:


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 14,463 Mod ✭✭✭✭marno21


    Im genuinely excited about what this move means for Irish radio. But I have a quibble on the technical front. Marconi House will simply have to raise their game in transmission terms. I live in west Dublin and I can no longer tune my radio to Newstalk - about 2 years ago, Today FM dropped off the dial. If I - living inside the M50, smack bang in the middle of the demographic - am having trouble picking up a signal, how does Denis O'Brien expect the over-50s down the country to make the switch?
    Today FM moved from 100.3 to 101.8 a few years ago and turned down the power, you should still get it on 101.8 or 100.9.

    Newstalk should still work on 106.0, or failing that 107.6


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,165 ✭✭✭mrsdewinter


    marno21 wrote: »
    Today FM moved from 100.3 to 101.8 a few years ago and turned down the power, you should still get it on 101.8 or 100.9.

    Newstalk should still work on 106.0, or failing that 107.6

    When I'm out and about, I've no trouble picking up the signal via either my phone or the car radio - it's just the radio on my (8yo) stereo that lets me down. It simply scrolls thru all the available stations - and Today FM and Newstalk simply aren't there.
    In any case, it's interesting to hear that DOB enterprises *did* tinker with the signal with Today FM.
    Hope somebody at Marconi House has a look at this issue. Before September.


  • Posts: 13,688 ✭✭✭✭ Abril Mango Metronome


    Kenny is getting Tom Dunne's slot?


  • Site Banned Posts: 11 Cyber735


    Cathalibm wrote: »
    I feel sorry for Tom Dunne. He has a good show between 10- 12, At least he still his sunday evening show for the moment. I bet he was seriously pissed when being told that he was being canned! I know that i would be. From listening to the radio while driving around dublin in the 10-12 timezone, there are only 2 serious options, tom on newstalk and kenny on radio 1.

    1 of those is now going on the 4th september. Personnelly im not a fan of kenny, find him to be a Gaybo lite for Dublin. He has no serious presence outside of Dublin. Looks like I'll be dusting off my cds to listen to them in the morning.

    On a side issue im finding myself listening less and less to Newstalk. Considering what they did to the Off the Ball crew a few months ago & now to Tom Dunne it looks like the owners have no loyalty to the presenters and listeners.:confused:

    I'd have to agree


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  • Registered Users Posts: 543 ✭✭✭CorsendonkX


    They started as a Dublin station before getting a national lisence granted.

    Since then they have made great efforts to broaden their appeal to the marsh-lands of beyond the Pale :p

    They do have a limited number of texters, Hook and Moncrieff texting audience seems to live in Skerries if the last couple of weeks is anything to go by.

    The Women on Air lobby won't be too happy with Newstalk lack of Sisterhood especially during the mid week. The Breakfast Show seems the place they like to slot in the "token" female.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,658 ✭✭✭✭For Forks Sake


    The Women on Air lobby won't be too happy with Newstalk lack of Sisterhood especially during the mid week. The Breakfast Show seems the place they like to slot in the "token" female.

    ..and see how well that worked out...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,114 ✭✭✭user1842


    I dont understand why comreg dont force radio stations to stick to one frequency. Newstalks reception in the west is appalling. I listen to it in Dublin but not outside Dublin because of this. Its a pain. Like 106 to 108 FM, come on, that's a joke. This issue will affect people outside Dublin wanting to listen to Pay Kenny, they wont if the signal cuts in and out which it does outside Leinster and the major cities.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,730 ✭✭✭europa11


    The Women on Air lobby won't be too happy with Newstalk lack of Sisterhood especially during the mid week. The Breakfast Show seems the place they like to slot in the "token" female.

    Wonder how NT's permanent victim and champion of the Sisterhood, Dil, will handle that little bit of in-housekeeping :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,785 ✭✭✭✭padd b1975


    I will definitely listen to Kenny on Newstalk.

    However I will switch back to Radio 1 for Ronan Collins and then News at 1 if the final half hour is the usual filler.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 14,463 Mod ✭✭✭✭marno21


    user1842 wrote: »
    I dont understand why comreg dont force radio stations to stick to one frequency. Newstalks reception in the west is appalling. I listen to it in Dublin but not outside Dublin because of this. Its a pain. Like 106 to 108 FM, come on, that's a joke. This issue will affect people outside Dublin wanting to listen to Pay Kenny, they wont if the signal cuts in and out which it does outside Leinster and the major cities.
    Newstalk are a quasi-national station. Their licence doesn't entitle them/force them to cover the whole country. The reason they are on 106-108 is because in most of the country there's no other place to put them unless they were splattered across the whole band. Imagine how much more difficult it would be to promote them if they were on 95.6 in Tralee, 104.8 in Killarney, 106.4 in Cork City, 102.1 in Mallow etc.

    Having it on 106-108 is actually better because it's clearer for longer then and isn't suffering from interference. Imagine if it was on 102.0 in Dublin. As soon as you clear the Dublin mountains and head west you'd have interference from Mt Leinster, Divis, Dungarvan and iRadio in Galway (assuming here we're in a Q102 free world). Reception in a car as you drive west from Dublin should be ok because there are plenty of transmitter sites along the way to keep you going (Three Rock, Saggart, Cairn Hill, Maghera etc). If you have issues + with other stations in your car I'd advise replacing either your aerial or radio.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,114 ✭✭✭user1842


    marno21 wrote: »
    Newstalk are a quasi-national station. Their licence doesn't entitle them/force them to cover the whole country. The reason they are on 106-108 is because in most of the country there's no other place to put them unless they were splattered across the whole band. Imagine how much more difficult it would be to promote them if they were on 95.6 in Tralee, 104.8 in Killarney, 106.4 in Cork City, 102.1 in Mallow etc.

    Having it on 106-108 is actually better because it's clearer for longer then and isn't suffering from interference. Imagine if it was on 102.0 in Dublin. As soon as you clear the Dublin mountains and head west you'd have interference from Mt Leinster, Divis, Dungarvan and iRadio in Galway (assuming here we're in a Q102 free world). Reception in a car as you drive west from Dublin should be ok because there are plenty of transmitter sites along the way to keep you going (Three Rock, Saggart, Cairn Hill, Maghera etc). If you have issues + with other stations in your car I'd advise replacing either your aerial or radio.

    Thanks for the info but why cant all Irish national stations be on the same frequencies across the country. If for example if RNAG is on 95.2 why cant it be on that frequency across the whole country and no other frequency.

    Why cant comreg just say that no local stations can use those frequencies or have a frequency block for local stations that national stations cannot use.

    Do it all in one go and there would be a bit of retuning but all the better for everyone I think.

    Maybe im missing something fundamental though, it just always annoyed me.

    Its not like we have loads and loads of stations to eat up frequency.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 14,463 Mod ✭✭✭✭marno21


    user1842 wrote: »
    Thanks for the info but why cant all Irish national stations be on the same frequencies across the country. If for example if RNAG is on 95.2 why cant it be on that frequency across the whole country and no other frequency.

    Stations such as RnaG have multiple transmitters across the country. If they were all lumped on one frequency all of those transmitters would interfere with each other. Therefore stations such as RnaG are assigned a block (92.5-94.6 and 102.7 in the North because 92.5 - 94.6 is used by BBC Radio Ulster). In the same way Newstalk has 106 - 108 (altho in general it uses 107.0 to 107.8)

    Why cant comreg just say that no local stations can use those frequencies or have a frequency block for local stations that national stations cannot use.

    Local stations do have their own blocks, which are seperate to the six national blocks. A lot of local stations also are strong enough to be picked up in neighbouring counties so they can't use the same block. For example Radio Kerry's 97.0 transmitter can be picked up all across Cork, and in most of Limerick, Tipperary, Waterford and Clare. For that reason 97.0 can't be used in those places because they would interfere with each other (the nearest usage is 97.1 in Clonmel and 96.8 in East Limerick).
    Do it all in one go and there would be a bit of retuning but all the better for everyone I think.
    If ComReg proposed a frequency audit there would be complaints from the radio stations because they'd fear they'd lose the frequencies that everyone is used to. Example 98.1 should belong to Lyric FM in Dublin and 98FM should be on 96.7 but they refused that move on promotional grounds. Same in North Tipp, Spin SW should be on 103.9 as it fits their 102-103 branding and Tipp FM should be shafted onto 94.7.

    Its not like we have loads and loads of stations to eat up frequency.
    We do though, that's the problem, because stations often cause interference outside their coverage area and there are quite a few relay stations that have wide broadcast areas too. Take 104-106 in Cork. 104.2, 104.5, 105.2, 105.4, 105.7 and 106.1 are all out of bounds in Cork city because all of those RedFM transmitters can be picked up in various parts of the city. Putting a transmitter in Cork on 105.7 would not only interfere with Red FM's 105.7 area but it would also be interfered with by RedFM's 105.7. For that reason stations these days are given less than ideal frequency assigments and coverage is restricted that way.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,114 ✭✭✭user1842


    marno21 wrote: »
    Stations such as RnaG have multiple transmitters across the country. If they were all lumped on one frequency all of those transmitters would interfere with each other. Therefore stations such as RnaG are assigned a block (92.5-94.6 and 102.7 in the North because 92.5 - 94.6 is used by BBC Radio Ulster). In the same way Newstalk has 106 - 108 (altho in general it uses 107.0 to 107.8)



    Local stations do have their own blocks, which are seperate to the six national blocks. A lot of local stations also are strong enough to be picked up in neighbouring counties so they can't use the same block. For example Radio Kerry's 97.0 transmitter can be picked up all across Cork, and in most of Limerick, Tipperary, Waterford and Clare. For that reason 97.0 can't be used in those places because they would interfere with each other (the nearest usage is 97.1 in Clonmel and 96.8 in East Limerick).


    If ComReg proposed a frequency audit there would be complaints from the radio stations because they'd fear they'd lose the frequencies that everyone is used to. Example 98.1 should belong to Lyric FM in Dublin and 98FM should be on 96.7 but they refused that move on promotional grounds. Same in North Tipp, Spin SW should be on 103.9 as it fits their 102-103 branding and Tipp FM should be shafted onto 94.7.



    We do though, that's the problem, because stations often cause interference outside their coverage area and there are quite a few relay stations that have wide broadcast areas too. Take 104-106 in Cork. 104.2, 104.5, 105.2, 105.4, 105.7 and 106.1 are all out of bounds in Cork city because all of those RedFM transmitters can be picked up in various parts of the city. Putting a transmitter in Cork on 105.7 would not only interfere with Red FM's 105.7 area but it would also be interfered with by RedFM's 105.7. For that reason stations these days are given less than ideal frequency assigments and coverage is restricted that way.

    Thanks for the comprehensive answer.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,257 ✭✭✭blue4ever


    marno21 wrote: »
    Stations such as RnaG have multiple transmitters across the country. If they were all lumped on one frequency all of those transmitters would interfere with each other. Therefore stations such as RnaG are assigned a block (92.5-94.6 and 102.7 in the North because 92.5 - 94.6 is used by BBC Radio Ulster). In the same way Newstalk has 106 - 108 (altho in general it uses 107.0 to 107.8)



    Local stations do have their own blocks, which are seperate to the six national blocks. A lot of local stations also are strong enough to be picked up in neighbouring counties so they can't use the same block. For example Radio Kerry's 97.0 transmitter can be picked up all across Cork, and in most of Limerick, Tipperary, Waterford and Clare. For that reason 97.0 can't be used in those places because they would interfere with each other (the nearest usage is 97.1 in Clonmel and 96.8 in East Limerick).


    If ComReg proposed a frequency audit there would be complaints from the radio stations because they'd fear they'd lose the frequencies that everyone is used to. Example 98.1 should belong to Lyric FM in Dublin and 98FM should be on 96.7 but they refused that move on promotional grounds. Same in North Tipp, Spin SW should be on 103.9 as it fits their 102-103 branding and Tipp FM should be shafted onto 94.7.



    We do though, that's the problem, because stations often cause interference outside their coverage area and there are quite a few relay stations that have wide broadcast areas too. Take 104-106 in Cork. 104.2, 104.5, 105.2, 105.4, 105.7 and 106.1 are all out of bounds in Cork city because all of those RedFM transmitters can be picked up in various parts of the city. Putting a transmitter in Cork on 105.7 would not only interfere with Red FM's 105.7 area but it would also be interfered with by RedFM's 105.7. For that reason stations these days are given less than ideal frequency assigments and coverage is restricted that way.

    That's a fantastic answer, honest. Looking at it now, there should have been a different approach to the distribution of the spectrum.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,048 ✭✭✭brilou23


    i listen to news talk all time but switch to pat when tom dunne comes on he be better suited to after off the ball


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 451 ✭✭armchair fusilier


    It would be interesting to know how many people listen to only RTE Radio 1 and never to any other radio station. A hell of a lot it would seem. Eamon Dunphy left a Saturday morning show on RTE with an audience of 260,000 to take up a Sunday morning show on Newstalk. One year later that show has just 50,000 listeners, Newstalk are trying to cut his salaries in half and he's gone.

    Of course you would expected Pat Kenny fare a lot better than Dunphy did, but how many new listeners would he have to attract to pay for that 400,000 euro salaries? A sponsor could offset some of it. I think more people than is expected will just keep listening to who ever replaces him over RTE, but given time I'm sure he will do very well and will also bring up the figures for the other shows around his. Not well enough to cover his cost though.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,718 ✭✭✭✭JonathanAnon


    europa11 wrote: »
    Wonder how NT's permanent victim and champion of the Sisterhood, Dil, will handle that little bit of in-housekeeping :D

    I have an interesting control experiment to see how good Pat Kenny is.. Put Dil on the breakfast show for the three hours preceding Pat Kenny. Then see how the listenership figures change (from zero) when his show starts... I'd say if you stepped outside your front door the noise of people switching their radios would be audible across the country..


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,988 ✭✭✭constitutionus


    ..and see how well that worked out...

    TWICE..

    three times if ya count orla barry.

    :D

    on the reception thing i have to say its fecking awfull in work (both offices) . ive taken to streaming newstalk through the PC as i just couldnt be arse trying to screen out the static anymore.

    thats bad news considering ive no prob getting RTE 1 in the same places.

    still ill be tuning in as pats a draw for me. didnt impress on telly but is stellar on radio IMO and i just dont see myles keeping me over pat.

    as another poster said if sean o rourke got the gig then ya might have a challenge, but right now i wouldnt like to be the one having to fill those slots.


  • Registered Users Posts: 353 ✭✭el pasco


    marno21 wrote: »
    Stations such as RnaG have multiple transmitters across the country. If they were all lumped on one frequency all of those transmitters would interfere with each other. Therefore stations such as RnaG are assigned a block (92.5-94.6 and 102.7 in the North because 92.5 - 94.6 is used by BBC Radio Ulster). In the same way Newstalk has 106 - 108 (altho in general it uses 107.0 to 107.8)



    Local stations do have their own blocks, which are seperate to the six national blocks. A lot of local stations also are strong enough to be picked up in neighbouring counties so they can't use the same block. For example Radio Kerry's 97.0 transmitter can be picked up all across Cork, and in most of Limerick, Tipperary, Waterford and Clare. For that reason 97.0 can't be used in those places because they would interfere with each other (the nearest usage is 97.1 in Clonmel and 96.8 in East Limerick).


    If ComReg proposed a frequency audit there would be complaints from the radio stations because they'd fear they'd lose the frequencies that everyone is used to. Example 98.1 should belong to Lyric FM in Dublin and 98FM should be on 96.7 but they refused that move on promotional grounds. Same in North Tipp, Spin SW should be on 103.9 as it fits their 102-103 branding and Tipp FM should be shafted onto 94.7.



    We do though, that's the problem, because stations often cause interference outside their coverage area and there are quite a few relay stations that have wide broadcast areas too. Take 104-106 in Cork. 104.2, 104.5, 105.2, 105.4, 105.7 and 106.1 are all out of bounds in Cork city because all of those RedFM transmitters can be picked up in various parts of the city. Putting a transmitter in Cork on 105.7 would not only interfere with Red FM's 105.7 area but it would also be interfered with by RedFM's 105.7. For that reason stations these days are given less than ideal frequency assigments and coverage is restricted that way.

    In the Netherlands they have FM radio stations all on the one frequency


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 14,463 Mod ✭✭✭✭marno21


    el pasco wrote: »
    In the Netherlands they have FM radio stations all on the one frequency

    In the Netherlands it's a completely different story due to the terrain. If Cork was flat C103 wouldn't need 10 different sites to achieve about 95% coverages (plenty of towns and villages with little/no coverage).

    Nothing stopping ComReg doing a spectrum audit and rearranging frequencies and forcing stations to use synchronoised transmission to cut down on the number of frequencies used.

    Modern station launches however have been much more efficient in their frequency usage, eg 4FM using 94.9 and 94.6 in Dublin, Nova using 100.3 and 100.5, Newstalk using 107.0 to 107.8 nationwide with little problems.

    In addition, the stations in the NL using 1 frequency aren't making much use of FM rebroadcast relays. If you wanted to cram C103 into 1 frequncy, C103 would then need to spend on link equipment to Kilworth, Clonakilty, Carrigaline, Kinsale, Youghal, Bantry and Macroom sites, which would cost a lot


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31,117 ✭✭✭✭snubbleste


    Kenny: I left RTÉ cos of PrimeTime madness
    Look at me - I'm talented! :mad:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 294 ✭✭Raspberry Fileds


    snubbleste wrote: »
    Kenny: I left RTÉ cos of PrimeTime madness
    Look at me - I'm talented! :mad:

    "I knew I wasn't enjoying Prime Time - it was unpredictable, often I would come back in to RTE after a day working in the radio building to interview a Junior Minister for five minutes, which seemed like madness."

    I don't understand his objection to it.


    "It was a revolution when I first moved, now we are focusing on the evolution of the show. It's a two-year project so we're taking it step by step."

    Revolution?! :D It could hardly be more similar to his previous show.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,591 ✭✭✭✭Aidric


    I like Pat, in fact I think he is the finest current affairs broadcaster on the circuit.

    That said, he indulges his inner sycophant a little too much. Perhaps he inherited it from his predecessor?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭catallus


    Didn't he have an interview with Louis Walsh yesterday? Had to turn off the radio.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 907 ✭✭✭foxtrot101


    snubbleste wrote: »
    Kenny: I left RTÉ cos of PrimeTime madness
    Look at me - I'm talented! :mad:

    Yep, Pat has always had a very well developed sense of his own self-worth.
    "I often wonder why there isn't the same fuss over the salaries paid to footballers like John O'Shea, earning more in three weeks than Marian Finucane earns in a year.

    "There is a double standard there. These people put themselves on the line, they entertain the nation week in, week out, and yet they are paid a trivial amount compared to footballers."

    I do rate him as presenter, but not nearly as highly as he does himself.


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