It's interesting to note that the alternative station that's been singled out in this thread as one of the most adventurous, and also having possibly the highest ratings in the format, is owned by Hubbard, not Entercom or iHeart. They're playing rock artists like Metallica, Shinedown and Greta Van Fleet alongside alternative acts like Radiohead and Billie Eilish. So I think there is someone at KPNT who understands how to put together a consensus of rock tracks from both active and alternative charts without being constrained by those genre labels. They also play a lot of currents which probably means they're on top of songs that are too new to test really well but push the envelope at that station. They have a 6.6 share to show for it, and high praise from radio people, at least on this message board.
The music director for KPNT is Don Fandango, who also does mid-day shifts there. His system for KPNT is a bit less tight than a typical alt station but it is by no means a AAA station either. There's about 300 songs plus currents rotating at a time, and about half of those will never leave, while everything else comes and goes in 50 song chunks every now and then. There's also about 300-500 "retro" songs from the 80's, 90's, and early 00's that get used for KPNT's retro blocks that may occasionally sneak onto the playlist. KPNT also has taken advantage of an environment that has a dominant classic rock station in KSHE, which is also KPNT's sister station, but hasn't had an active rock station for well over a decade, so KPNT tries to satisfy both active rock and alternative listeners.
They're being challenged by an iHeart outlet, KLLT, but KLLT is basically KYSR by another name. What KYSR does in LA doesn't seem to be translating to St. Louis very well.
Fandango's also set up an elaborate system for currents that gets them tested in the public eye. Obviously there's affairs going on behind the scenes as well, but in general they follow a four-step process to getting currents into heavy rotation and it seems to work well for them.
1. New Music Sunday, which is the first test. Usually a song will get 2-3 shots on this program unless it
really bombs or is already breaking out into a success. Active and AAA songs join with alt songs during this trial period, actives generally have a better shot but AAA songs occasionally do pass.
2. New At Nine. A daily program at 9 p.m. where the new arrivals are played alongside accepted currents. They're technically added to the rotation but they generally don't play outside of this program. Some don't make it out (a recent example would be "Rockin' With the Best" by P.O.D.). Most AAA songs don't get farther than this either (such as "You Had Your Soul With You" by The National or "Hypersonic Missiles" by Sam Fender).
3. Nighttime rotation. KPNT has two playlists, a day and a night. The night plays more new music, and if the song tests well at New at Nine, it'll move to here and play regularly at night. This will get the song approximately 20-25 spins a week. These songs usually still feature at New at Nine in-between the test songs. Some songs with this status include "It Doesn't Matter Why" by Silversun Pickups, "Go" by The Black Keys, and "Why Did You Run?" by Judah & The Lion.
4. Heavy rotation. The top 8-12 songs at KPNT are this, they play during the day (when less new music and more recurrents spin) as well as night. Songs with this status include "Monsters" by Shinedown, "Promise Me" by Badflower, "Longshot" by Catfish & The Bottlemen and "Alligator" by Of Monsters and Men.
P.S. Some songs get an exception and outside of formalities jump straight into nighttime or even heavy rotation. "Panic Attack" by The Glorious Sons is the most recent song to receive this treatment, as "S.O.S. (Sawed Off Shotgun)" was
really popular in St. Louis, so they've already placed "Panic Attack" into heavy rotation.
KROQ doesn't seem to have this kind of elaborate approach to testing songs and getting them into the rotation at this time, which may be contributing to the problems the station is having.
He knows what will work in St. Louis. KYSR plays more currents than The Point, and it they have a 2 share.
No one in the genre has more experience or more respect than KROQ's Kevin Weatherly.
I thought when you did a count KPNT had 30 to KYSR's 27, unless that's changed recently.