Well, that is listener perception, and while I agree with you from a listener standpoint, from a radio programming standpoint, the numbers simply do not work that way at all.All Christmas should not happen until Nov 26th at least
And the listeners who don't agree can always find another station to listen to during the "too early" weeks. Their numbers will be replaced, and then some. by the throngs who stop listening to those other stations and want to get "in the spirit" as soon as their holiday favorites start playing.Well, that is listener perception, and while I agree with you from a listener standpoint, from a radio programming standpoint, the numbers simply do not work that way at all.
You're a mean one, Mr. Grinch. š¤£All Christmas should not happen until Nov 26th at least
Hanukkah ends on Dec. 6 this year, before some stations have even make the flip. In 2005, the eight-day holiday didn't even BEGIN until Dec. 25!You're a mean one, Mr. Grinch. š¤£
If I had my take, Christmas music would be reserved to December 24th and 25th. As Retro said, it pulls in numbers and advertising dollars. So, who am I in tbe grand scheme? Just that hearing 15 versions of "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" and 20 versions of "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" does get old for two months to a month and half run.
Then add the whole part of "being politically correct" is to say that it's a "holiday station" while playing nothing but Christmas songs, makes me scratch my head. Either admit it's a Christmas stations or add some Hanukkah songs to the mix. š¤£
Are you female 25-44? If not, you're an outlier for the format and its preferred music.I've never understood the appeal of "Christmas" music. If it were traditional Christmas carols I could understand. But I remember one time when a certain "magical" station played three different versions of "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" in a row! I just don't get it. And the "magical" station took OFF my smooth jazz from it's HD2 to put on Christmas music year round!![]()
I always forget if it's Winter Wonderland or Jingle Bells that was actually written as a Thanksgiving song. I know it was one of them.Hanukkah ends on Dec. 6 this year, before some stations have even make the flip. In 2005, the eight-day holiday didn't even BEGIN until Dec. 25!
As for "holiday music," so much of it celebrates winter more than it does Christmas -- which kind of brings it back to its pagan roots, doesn't it? A midwinter festival is common to many Northern Hemisphere cultures, and since the Christmas story was finalized in Europe centuries after the events in Judea, Christmas' placement on the calendar is perfect for getting maximum compliance from the faithful. So ... might "seasonal music" be a better name to apply to a format that features songs like "Winter Wonderland," "Frosty the Snowman" and (on some stations) "Baby, It's Cold Outside"?