Radio Industry News, Radio Show Prep, Radio Promotions, Radio Station Data, Podcast News Hot beats The River (3.2 / 3.1) …Never thought this would happen.
I don't think that is excessively true in CHR's target demo, which is sort of 18-34 women but mostly 25-44 women. The era of teen appeal of CHR died a number of decades ago along with "night rocker" DJs and the like.What is interesting today is that there is actually so much music "out there," yet what is being programmed and deemed hits are falling short of listeners expectations. the The bigger issue in this era (vs. 1987) is "self-centered" personal listening and discovery is stronger in the demographic today and I am not sure how "radio"ever recovers from that.
The bigger issue in this era (vs. 1987) is "self-centered" personal listening and discovery is stronger in the demographic today and I am not sure how "radio" ever "recovers" from that.
1) Corporate greed, sterilization and while better in many ways than "mom and pop" stations sounded twenty years ago, the delivery is not really changing. Sound quality, professional sound and tailoring local to a more national sound, yes.
2) Signal issues and coverage vs. satellite and home/office listening.
3.) Record labels and artists think exactly how much about radio these days?
4.) You have a market like Nashville with say 20 FM signals. A certain percentage of them now are non-music or religious.
The walls are closing in and WE ALL know that is eventual. How do we save ourselves from ourselves?
And what would you do differently when the industry has lost over 60% of its "real dollars" in the last 20 years?Off the subject of this topic, but we talk about this all the time. I contend radio is an entity that now has so many variables that are not in it's favor. And CHR is one of those formats that's showing it's weakness.
1) Corporate greed, sterilization and while better in many ways than "mom and pop" stations sounded twenty years ago, the delivery is not really changing. Sound quality, professional sound and tailoring local to a more national sound, yes.
Satellite stagnated at about 11% of vehicles over a decade ago. For direct signal broadcast to cars, it only grows with the population.2) Signal issues and coverage vs. satellite and home/office listening. We are more and more on our own island. A good thing and a bad thing.
Depends on the format. In country and all forms of Latin Music, radio is critical. Same on AC and Urban AC. A lot depends on the attitude of the artists themselves and whether they understand the role, still, of radio.3.) Record labels and artists think exactly how much about radio these days? Back in the 80's and prior, where else could a record label really go to hit a mass audience? If anything, radio, while still valid, does not get the respect and consideration that would or could move the music needle to "fix" the music issue. I believe it is going in the opposite direction.
There are 45 commercial stations in the market. Only 15 are considered "viable" by an industry source.4.) You have a market like Nashville with say 20 FM signals. A certain percentage of them now are non-music or religious. That narrows the options to a handful of stations and then people who don't listen to CHR go where? Or AC or Country?
The sports panorama only includes 2 viable signals. One is a top 5 biller, the other is still viable but depends on sports marketing dollars nationally due to its ESPN affiliation. The rest don't count.A news or sports talk fan in Nashville has many options. Sport is overloaded and they are competing for small revenue dollars and most are not profitable. You have half a dozen various stations programming religious music.
It's always been that way. WMAK's better signal beat WKDA in the 70's. But then the big FM signals that were not directional at night and on lousy frequencies took over. We end up now, still, with more formats and stations that are viable than we had in the 60's and 70's.That means what is being offered if diminished and not as vibrant as it was and should be. So the whole industry (radio dial) suffers. You are only as good as those you. are surrounded by.
CHR has always been cyclical. Look at the 1960-1963 period after the payola scandals... terrible music that was not improved on for almost 4 years! But this is a music issue, not a radio one.I agree with your analogy of formats balancing out. You have to have that diversity. It's interesting to watch each year get more and more tight and see aging demographics and fewer younger listeners even aware of what was "our music lives" to many of "us." I think CHR is a just the first break in the ice on music on FM in the years ahead. What happens when AC reverts back to older songs because the new music is not enough to sustain growth?
This is all slow evolution. Abrams' "Superstars" did not just fail to wake up one morning... it faded and evolved into AOR classic hits. Same with all formats.What happens when the popularity of country takes a cyclical break? When those two things happen, and it may be a decade away, who do Classic Hits and Classic Rock stations do? The walls are closing in and WE ALL know that is eventual. How do we save ourselves from ourselves?
And any long-time country fan misses the fiddles and steel guitars (On the other hand, I loved the FGL urban crossovers enough to go to a concert!).Added: Ross on Radio just hit my email. Today is a discussion of Nashville radio. Interesting read that hits close to home on this subject. Also in his "headlines" was the comment is the country format in trouble? We shall see.
Yet I can't find a single bad signal station that is highly profitable just because it makes up for coverage with its stream. And the stream's rights fees eat nearly all of any billing they have.That's not a problem if you stream the signal, and since people aren't buying radios anymore, that's most likely the method.
As I mentioned while you were posting this, a lot has to do with artist recognition of radio. Country artists even thank radio when they get awards. I have not seen an urban or hip hop artist do that for ten to 15 years.Depends on the format. Have you ever been to Country Radio Seminar? It's happening next week in your home town. You'll get the answer to your question there.
And as I mentioned, there are stations that don't have the ability due to signal or management (Hello, David Field) to compete successfully. That has been the case since the 50's; even then half of all stations, per the actual FCC annual report, did not make money.Simple solution: The marketplace decides. The formats you get are the ones that make the most money.
That sums up my answer to "why doesn't radio do something?". This comes up when people don't understand that radio can't make national advertisers buy 55+ audiences; radio leaders, group owners and every local street seller tries but you can't easily change things that respond to greater forces.You can't worry about things you can't control. Every one of us is in charge of our own square foot. There is no "industry." Even the NAB knows its limitations, and they don't speak for everyone.
Yet I can't find a single bad signal station that is highly profitable just because it makes up for coverage with its stream. And the stream's rights fees eat nearly all of any billing they have.
That is an interesting station. Despite only covering 2/3 of the Monterey/Salinas market, it is about 5th in billing which is excellent. The owner, the Stephens family, has the largest share (35%) of local revenue of any owner.Don't forget about KPIG. They also sell subscriptions to make up for advertising shortfalls.
Online Streaming (KPIG.COM)
KPIG features a mix of folk, rock, alternative, blues and comedy, plus commentary. Listen live online!.www.kpig.com
So you're saying that a sizable portion of teens today aren't listening to the artists currently on CHR stations at all, or that they're listening to them but not on FM? If the former, then what artists ARE they listening to? If the latter, how do you expect them to become FM listeners once they get into their twenties? Won't they just continue to rely on media other than OTA radio for their music?I don't think that is excessively true in CHR's target demo, which is sort of 18-34 women but mostly 25-44 women. The era of teen appeal of CHR died a number of decades ago along with "night rocker" DJs and the like.
No, I am saying that CHR stations target, principally, adult younger women.So you're saying that a sizable portion of teens today aren't listening to the artists currently on CHR stations at all, or that they're listening to them but not on FM? If the former, then what artists ARE they listening to? If the latter, how do you expect them to become FM listeners once they get into their twenties? Won't they just continue to rely on media other than OTA radio for their music?
I'm glad you did not take offense at my response or BigA's. This is a good example of interesting and provocative dialogue. BigAll valid points, David and BigA. I think that David said it best: "most are evolutionary, not revolutionary." I have to work a bit. Today is fun because today is Kool & The Gang Day and Kool is in town. He is revolutionary launching his new Kool Champagne line. BigA, I will follow up. If you are playing here in town let me know. I go do a bit with the event, but crowds and groups make me nervous... best to stay hidden safely away.
So you're saying that a sizable portion of teens today aren't listening to the artists currently on CHR stations at all, or that they're listening to them but not on FM? If the former, then what artists ARE they listening to?
If the latter, how do you expect them to become FM listeners once they get into their twenties? Won't they just continue to rely on media other than OTA radio for their music?
The "shiny new" car I just got last month has an "audio" button that has a speaker as its icon. If I push it or "tell it" verbally, it brings up "Satellite-FM-AM-Apple" as options. None is easier or more intuitive than any other.Depends on what they want and what they can afford. We're not in the device business. My marching orders are to be on every device. If you do that, then it doesn't matter what happens to FM. But if they buy a car, the easiest and cheapest way to hear what they want will be that FM thing in the middle of the dash.
The "shiny new" car I just got last month has an "audio" button that has a speaker as its icon. If I push it or "tell it" verbally, it brings up "Satellite-FM-AM-Apple" as options. None is easier or more intuitive than any other.
But it requires an additional step. I was referring to the fact that all four options are in the default screen menu under "audio".Although there are a couple that require no subscription. If the bluetooth in your phone is on, usually the car will recognize it.
But it requires an additional step. I was referring to the fact that all four options are in the default screen menu under "audio".