Most Christmas music radio playlists have become heavily secular. I wish these stations would make an exception for Christmas itself. Let them play whatever ratio of actual Christian vs. secular holiday music they please during their giant, multi-month-long all-holiday music marathons. But for the actual holiday itself, perhaps starting at sunset on Christmas Eve and continuing until 11:59:59 PM on Christmas Day, it would be nice if their playlists were adjusted to keep the secular songs down to no more than 25%, for the sake of all the faithful.
Edit:
I feel compelled to add something here. I actually resent how out of control these marathons' lengths have become. Disdain, among Christians and non-Christians alike, is now quite common for all the Christmas decorations and marketing department-manufactured gift buying hysteria getting kicked off earlier and earlier every year. I'm one of the folks who has always intensely disliked it, and on that note, more and more, I'm beginning to see stations that go "all Holiday music" the split second Halloween ends (or not long after) as little more than participants in that same revenue-crazed, greedy behavior. I know others feel the same way, and yet it's clear from the ratings of stations like KOST, whenever they go all-Christmas, that they're making so much money, nobody will ever be able to talk them into backing off. But after reflecting a moment on my words above, I'm kind of wondering if my idea, which was originally just an off-handed thought, might actually be the perfect "solution" to this "dilemma." Imagine having a 75%/25% or even a 90%/10% secular/faithful song selection ratio during the main portion of each station's marathon, which gets billed on-air as "Holiday music." But then, each station flips that to 10%/90% secular/faithful and bills it as "Christmas music" for the aforementioned sunset on Christmas Eve to 11:59 PM on Christmas Day period -- the very timeframe that Christians consider to be the actual holiday itself proper. That would make the latter timeframe a completely separate "product" and "experience," in effect. Done this way, these mega-marathons possibly wouldn't contribute nearly as much (or even contribute at all) to the feeling many faithful get that the spiritual music's overuse runs Christmas into the ground. The faithful music itself, played almost entirely during that brief period that constitutes the actual holiday, would even seem special to everybody again, the way it felt special hearing it on the air decades ago when stations only ran 24 hours or so worth, and when it was not primarily secular.
Just a thought.