The totally infectious and irrelevant June numbers are here: https://ratings.****************/content/arb033
Somehow I can't motivate myself to make any comments yet...
Somehow I can't motivate myself to make any comments yet...
The totally infectious and irrelevant June numbers are here: https://ratings.****************/content/arb033
Somehow I can't motivate myself to make any comments yet...
How is the Classic Rock format still thriving? If you were 18 in 1973 and jammed out to Pink Floyd’s “Time,” you are now 65 years old and are no longer in the 25-54 demographic.
How is the Classic Rock format still thriving? If you were 18 in 1973 and jammed out to Pink Floyd’s “Time,” you are now 65 years old and are no longer in the 25-54 demographic.
I don't think I've heard "Time" on a classic rock station in at least 20 years, which should tell you how the format has evolved.
The center lane of the format these days is the 1980s.
How is the Classic Rock format still thriving? If you were 18 in 1973 and jammed out to Pink Floyd’s “Time,” you are now 65 years old and are no longer in the 25-54 demographic.
The amazing thing to know is that classic rock appeals to young people 18-34. That's what we see in a lot of markets around the country.
That differs greatly from what we see with classic hits. So old rock translates well to young people, old pop does not.
Do you have any data that backs that up?
Sure...in Houston The Eagle usually does well 18-49, although it's been on a rough stretch lately. But it had been Top 5 in that demo. In Philadelphia their classic rock WMGK has occasionally been #1 in 18-34. Classic hits stations aim more towards 25-54. What's hurting current rock is it's in a very weak period for new music. Certainly the shutdown in touring has hurt current formats.
The totally infectious and irrelevant June numbers are here: https://ratings.****************/content/arb033
Somehow I can't motivate myself to make any comments yet...
Theresa can sell ice to an eskimo.