As I said in an earlier post, my theory is that the issue with 90s rock hits now being branded as "classic rock" is that they are still in rotation on stations that are considered to be active rock. There isn't much distinction to the modern listener. It goes deeper into my theory concerning part of the listenership of rock stations shortening.
It's a double edge sword. The insiders state that the 90s hits are what still test well, and that there is a great amount of splitting in active rock to not be able to pin down a format that would generate a large audience. My argument against it is that sticking to the 90s hits only pushes potential younger listeners away. In 2021, 90s hits to younger audiences is what 70s hits were to most people in the 90s, their "parents' music." With WBOS, my theory is that people are simply turned away because the music can be found anywhere, and it's been beyond overplayed for the last 20 years as "active rock." We can say 25+ years, counting when it was new. There's isn't a distinction. In all honesty, as the 70s and 80s age out of key demos, I hypothesize that within the next decade, WZLX will be in the same boat. It is a heritage station, but as the generations of 70s and 80s "age out," the next group is the overplayed 90s hits that are still in heavy rotation on active rock stations. Because of the over-emphesis on 90s over the last 20 years, there isn't that much to become classic rock in the next few decades. As active rock dried up 15 years ago, it's my hypothesis that classic rock will dry up as well within the next decades.
For this format specifically, I see the only way is for someone to gamble on a section of modern rock and see if it's profitable. Classic rock will thin out, until this generation ages into the format. But in all honesty, I see rock on terrestrial radio going away within the next decade or two. Companies will go with formats that are tested well before taking a chance.
The over-reliance on 90s combined with little filtering in of current (younger) acts already thinned out active rock, and classic rock will go the same way in the coming echo.
It's a double edge sword. The insiders state that the 90s hits are what still test well, and that there is a great amount of splitting in active rock to not be able to pin down a format that would generate a large audience. My argument against it is that sticking to the 90s hits only pushes potential younger listeners away. In 2021, 90s hits to younger audiences is what 70s hits were to most people in the 90s, their "parents' music." With WBOS, my theory is that people are simply turned away because the music can be found anywhere, and it's been beyond overplayed for the last 20 years as "active rock." We can say 25+ years, counting when it was new. There's isn't a distinction. In all honesty, as the 70s and 80s age out of key demos, I hypothesize that within the next decade, WZLX will be in the same boat. It is a heritage station, but as the generations of 70s and 80s "age out," the next group is the overplayed 90s hits that are still in heavy rotation on active rock stations. Because of the over-emphesis on 90s over the last 20 years, there isn't that much to become classic rock in the next few decades. As active rock dried up 15 years ago, it's my hypothesis that classic rock will dry up as well within the next decades.
For this format specifically, I see the only way is for someone to gamble on a section of modern rock and see if it's profitable. Classic rock will thin out, until this generation ages into the format. But in all honesty, I see rock on terrestrial radio going away within the next decade or two. Companies will go with formats that are tested well before taking a chance.
The over-reliance on 90s combined with little filtering in of current (younger) acts already thinned out active rock, and classic rock will go the same way in the coming echo.
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