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That IS the point. I grew up with radio, love(d) radio - understood from a young age that good radio is probably even harder to do than good TV. Radio, done right, is a tremendous source of entertainment and is most importantly, (call me crazy, I know)... FUN! Something you actually look forward to doing.
Any business that fails to invest in its own product eventually gets beaten out by somebody who will. This is exactly what is happening to over the air radio today. But David will be long retired when the chickens come home to roost and all we have is a once thriving medium that is a shadow of its own former glory. What we have now across the various formats is the race to the lowest common denominator - the more mind-numbing, repetitive and insulting to the intelligence of the listener, the better. Why? Because that's where the ratings are! No matter what the format is, radio takes the subject and dumbs it down. Whether it is talk, rock, chr, oldies. They are not interested in the quality of the product they are destroying because that is a long-term issue, and the radio industry only cares about it's next ratings book and its next bond payment.
I WANT to be able to tune into intelligent local radio. Here in LA/Hollywood, the most entertainment driven city possibly on the planet, that is (tragically) impossible due to personalities that aren't allowed to have any and playlists driven by the computer. Radio drove me away. I would love to come back, really. But since the David E.'s of the world know how to boil everything down to a list that can fit one two sheets of paper and get huge ratings doing it, that is impossible. David can crow about all of the station's he has taken from worst to first, what he can't tell you is how many people he and his kind have driven away from the business entirely. I am one of them. There are thousands if not millions of others. The business cannot make advertising money by selling their commercials to us because we are not there. And I will remind again, yes I am comfortably within the money demos. In short, we others will get what we want, it just won't be from local radio. And our numbers are growing every day.
If you look at stations that are popular, none of them are able to survive with playlists that stay the same for a long time. The most popular stations, KIIS and AMP, have small playlists, but every few months, it's out with the old, in with the new.
If we look at KLOS vs. Sound, KLOS has recently had the smaller playlist (though they're both small.) Sound is winning. (Must mention, though, that Sunday nights Bob Coburn has an amazing show on KLOS that is 100% freeform.)
JACK rose to prominence with a BIGGER playlist, and has stayed around by constantly changing what they're playing.
For K-Earth, they had their lowest point when they tried to play about 300 songs only during Jay Coffey's days. Started out OK, but got burnt out. But there is another issue: the 80s songs are, I think, not going to withstand the overplaying so well. Can we really hear Holiday by Madonna or Sussudio by Phil Collins the way we heard Satisfaction or even the much joked-about Brown Eyed Girl? I think the burnout will happen even faster.
It's too bad really, because K-Earth has a talented DJ staff that could do great things with an engaging playlist. They are a link to radio past with their old-style jingle amazingly still in use. But they're now playing songs we can hear elsewhere on the dial, and the presentation has zero creativity, particularly on weekends. I'm in their target demo, having grown up in the 80s, but now when I punch up K-Earth, it is basically indistinguishable from the other stations on the dial playing the Cars, the Eagles, Prince…