As I write this, it's October 25th, meaning that we're just seven days from the beginning of the traditional All-Christmas wave of temporary format changes, usually at Adult Contemporary stations (which is why I'm starting this thread on this board).
Over most of the past decade, only about a half-dozen stations would do so as early as November 1st; last year, that number was about twelve stations on that date.
Given that retailers (the prime source of advertising revenues for music-formatted stations) had a very disappointing back-to-school shopping season, there is probably much fear in that industry about a sub-par Christmas shopping season, no doubt stoked by the Washington partial shutdown and the drama about the Federal debt ceiling.
What does the preceding paragraph have to do with radio stations going All-Christmas?? Call me a conspiracy theorist, but I think that paragraph has everything to do with why we may hear more stations going All-Christmas earlier than usual. Retailers and their ad agencies may well pressure radio stations to play more Christmas music, and to go All-Christmas earlier.
And given how much music radio depends on retailers for ad revenues, they may succumb to the pressure.
Personally, I don't think radio stations should even play Christmas music until December 1st, and then, just one Christmas song every third hour through December 10th; then one Christmas song every other hour from December 11th through 17th; then one Christmas song an hour from December 18th through 12 Noon on Christmas Eve; and finally All-Christmas for 36 hours from 12 Noon December 24th through 12 Midnight December 25th.
The idea is that people would be "eased" into the Season and not be hit with it by a 2-by-4.
But while I don't see more stations going All-Christmas this year, I do expect a lot more stations will start much earlier than in the past. In fact, I suspect we'll see several dozen flips next Friday (November 1st).
By the way, it seems that 100000 Watts.com is defunct, but it's staff has moved over to Inside Radio.com. Maybe they will have the updated list of All-Christmas stations that 100000 Watts.com previously had.
Over most of the past decade, only about a half-dozen stations would do so as early as November 1st; last year, that number was about twelve stations on that date.
Given that retailers (the prime source of advertising revenues for music-formatted stations) had a very disappointing back-to-school shopping season, there is probably much fear in that industry about a sub-par Christmas shopping season, no doubt stoked by the Washington partial shutdown and the drama about the Federal debt ceiling.
What does the preceding paragraph have to do with radio stations going All-Christmas?? Call me a conspiracy theorist, but I think that paragraph has everything to do with why we may hear more stations going All-Christmas earlier than usual. Retailers and their ad agencies may well pressure radio stations to play more Christmas music, and to go All-Christmas earlier.
And given how much music radio depends on retailers for ad revenues, they may succumb to the pressure.
Personally, I don't think radio stations should even play Christmas music until December 1st, and then, just one Christmas song every third hour through December 10th; then one Christmas song every other hour from December 11th through 17th; then one Christmas song an hour from December 18th through 12 Noon on Christmas Eve; and finally All-Christmas for 36 hours from 12 Noon December 24th through 12 Midnight December 25th.
The idea is that people would be "eased" into the Season and not be hit with it by a 2-by-4.
But while I don't see more stations going All-Christmas this year, I do expect a lot more stations will start much earlier than in the past. In fact, I suspect we'll see several dozen flips next Friday (November 1st).
By the way, it seems that 100000 Watts.com is defunct, but it's staff has moved over to Inside Radio.com. Maybe they will have the updated list of All-Christmas stations that 100000 Watts.com previously had.
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