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TV stole what PM audience from what AM?
3.3% in 1948 to 18.3% in 1949. Mostly this is TV, of course, and obviously had to come from AM station evening audiences —
But what stations ?
Again the answer Is supplied by Hooper's May-September 1949 figures with the comparable report of 1948. All network-affiliated stations individually lost from 2% to 5.8%. And the total, interestingly enough, approximates the gain for "FM, TV and others."
On the other hand, one Boston station held its evening audience — and even gained listeners against TV competition. This independent station — the Herald-Traveler station WHDH — demonstrated the power of news-sports-music programming to complement video fare in the home.
Now with TV in the picture, Boston's fastest growing station continues to be your surest, best buy in Boston radio.
In Boston's first year of TV, the evening share of audience for "FM, TV and ail others" zoomed from
Here's what TV did to
Share of Audience May through September
Boston Evening Radio Listening...
Evening Sunday through Saturday 6:00 p.m. — 10:30 p.m.
Network-affiliated stations lost as high as 30% of their evening audiences, according to these Hooper figures, in Boston's first full year of TV. And independent WHDH is the only station that gained! In Boston, look to WHDH to protect your radio position.
1948 1949
Audience change
Homes Using Sets A
26.2 25.0
-5.8
21.8 12.0 20.7 14.0 16.0 9.4 18.7 9.8
Network Stations
2.6 -2.0 -4.2 +0.4
B
C
WHDH
23.8 24.2
Represented Nationally by John Blair & Co,
WHDH
^OADCASTING • Telecasting
December 5, 1949 • Page 15