Sounds like they’re back to the old playlist this morning. Tell it to my heart from Taylor Dayne followed by Straight Up from Paula Abdul. I’m sure Madonna will be on the way before 8:30.
They seem to be dayparting it out. Morning drive had very little 90s and was like the WOGL of a week ago. Now it looks like they’re back to the rotation they had Friday and over the weekend.Sounds like they’re back to the old playlist this morning. Tell it to my heart from Taylor Dayne followed by Straight Up from Paula Abdul. I’m sure Madonna will be on the way before 8:30.
So funny that you chose Genesis for your example. I always turn off a radio or stream whenever Phil Collins comes on. He just irks me! 🤣Listen at work is generally background. People at work are by and large working. They are talking to co-workers, taking calls, stepping out, and on and on. What they’re not doing is tracking songs, or artists. I’m sure we can find the one example of the cousin’s friend’s acquaintance’s chiropractor’s receptionist who’s a little outside the norm when it comes to noticing just how often they’re playing Bon Jovi. And maybe that irks her. Or maybe not.
I’m not saying this weekend is automatically the game plan forever. I’m saying it makes sense to amp up the highest testing songs during a potential sampling phase. We can reasonably assume they will continue using testing and data to find and adjust the core playlist.
I’m sorry though, the idea a few extra Genesis tunes is somehow going to cause a fast and mass exodus just seems over the top silly.
That's a lotta female pop from 1989!Sounds like they’re back to the old playlist this morning. Tell it to my heart from Taylor Dayne followed by Straight Up from Paula Abdul. I’m sure Madonna will be on the way before 8:30.
Another bit of irony: I've seen very few concerts in the past 5 years because (a) I'm hard of hearing and (b) #pandemic. But three concerts I have seen during that time were Madonna, Paula Abdul, and Taylor Dayne. Ladies of the '80s indeed!The ladies of the eighties 😉
If they are on a cleanse, it seems unwise. Get rid of the older listeners while annoying the ones you want by repeating the same songs 2 or 3 times a day? Again, this isn't a format launch; they're just sprucing up the library and they decided to give themselves a name. If they want to lose the older listeners, I would suggest they stick with a larger library but eliminate the much-older titles because the audience who's tuning in for them will naturally fall away. Or be buried.I wonder if they’re trying to “cleanse” listeners that are out of the demo by stressing certain songs that define the sound they are going for in high rotation? Would that be of any benefit, though?
This is an interesting way to rebrand a radio station, especially one that wasn’t doing *that* poorly (Audacy has classic hits and other stations doing worse in other markets like Phoenix and Dallas)
Not sure if I agree with this. I still think there is a place in “mass appeal” radio that plays Elvis once a day.
It’s funny, WOGL was the big PPM success story when that system was first launched and led to a lot of stations flipping to classic hits. Now it seems to be weaker than those it helped spawn.
There are plenty of days that I wish that was the case, but the logistics of that would be off the charts problematic for overpopulation. Still, it's a nice thought for me that I would never wear down.If it stood still and no one aged,
Oh, I don’t doubt that. I’m just wondering if this is a situation unique to WOGL or if other large market classic hits stations are having the same issue. Apparently it was bad enough for WOGL to have to rebrand and revamp everything. Will other stations follow?Time marches on. If it stood still and no one aged, classic hits would be easier to program. The problem now is that, in order to reach sellable demos, they need to drift from what made them different. Their heritage audience doesn't want the station to change, but it has to in order to attract advertising. This is where art battles with commerce.
Will other stations follow?
And classic hits (going back to oldies) stations are about to face one of their biggest tests as they move nearly completely out of the late 70s and early 80s, which at some stations is already underway. They won’t be able to focus on the 80s forever which has been successful.At some point many will have to, because as the music & presentation changes, it becomes a different radio station.
I'm not sure the "big" brand is the best solution. It's not much different from using "now" with CHR.
"Sussudio" is probably the only Collins vocal I like. Like some of the other hits of the summer of '85, it gives me nostalgia for that watershed season of my life.So funny that you chose Genesis for your example. I always turn off a radio or stream whenever Phil Collins comes on. He just irks me! 🤣