Here is where K-EARTH is at today and they have to resemble KIIS-FM when Rick Dees was there in the 1990's.
Not really, and especially not since Rush's passing. I concluded years ago KFI had been neutered and was no longer "stimulating".You don't listen to conservative talk stations?
If a radio station took an album cut and played it like "a current" because the believed in it, and that station's listeners took to the song, then it was "a hit" to the cume of that station.Many people like artists from several decades and not just the "hits". There's always been a fallacy that Album Cuts are a ratings killer. That's not true when a station has an identity and is programmed intelligently...
If a radio station took an album cut and played it like "a current" because the believed in it, and that station's listeners took to the song, then it was "a hit" to the cume of that station.
No you're facing a realityWait, someone is wanting more 90s and not 60s on KRTH?
I’ve entered another dimension.
Wait, someone is wanting more 90s and not 60s on KRTH?
I’ve entered another dimension.
Nothing wrong with the original Oldies music that heritage Oldes stations are known for. The Baby Boomers are literally the last generation with substantial disposable income in this country. It's asinine that that demo has been put out to pasture for 20 years. And Radio wonders where its sustainable/growth advertising revenue went. The whole industry has been slowly cannibalizing itself for about that long.On this board, you’re more likely to hear whining about how K-Earth needs to play more 60s music and bring back the old Drake jingles.
This post demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of how the radio business works.Nothing wrong with the original Oldies music that heritage Oldes stations are known for. The Baby Boomers are literally the last generation with substantial disposable income in this country. It's asinine that that demo has been put out to pasture for 20 years. And Radio wonders where its sustainable/growth advertising revenue went. The whole industry has been slowly cannibalizing itself for about that long.
Nothing wrong with the original Oldies music that heritage Oldes stations are known for. The Baby Boomers are literally the last generation with substantial disposable income in this country. It's asinine that that demo has been put out to pasture for 20 years. And Radio wonders where its sustainable/growth advertising revenue went. The whole industry has been slowly cannibalizing itself for about that long.
They say you are getting old when the music they play in banks and grocery stores sound good to you. I worry about this because the music at the store has definitely improved over the years.Obviously, whatever KRTH does it works to reach it's desired audience...but to me, who has lived through that music, there's nothing exciting about it...it's really just MUSAK !
it depends on what store your talking about !They say you are getting old when the music they play in banks and grocery stores sound good to you. I worry about this because the music at the store has definitely improved over the years.
It still happens now. In fact it happened yesterday. I see that at least 50 country radio stations played album cuts from Kenny Chesney's new album yesterday in honor of his album release. They didn't have to do it. Kenny isn't the hot new artist he was 20 years ago. But he has name recognition. People are interested. So radio stations broke format to play album cuts.
They use talk radio and TV to reach that group because that's where older listeners are. Broadcast TV is an old-skewing medium, and talk radio attracts older demographics.Radio doesn't make this decision. Advertisers do. Radio would love to play 50s-60s music. Keep in mind a lot of the radio owners are boomers. Bob Pittman of iHeart is in his 70s. He played oldies music when they were currents. But advertisers don't use music radio to reach people in that age. They use talk radio and TV. The products being sold require more information than can be put into a short radio spot. This is why advertisers prefer to use infomercials on talk radio to reach this group.
Touting corporate country radio playing Kenny Chesney today as being somehow akin to WMMS breaking Rush at the beginning of their career is a pretty good example of what's wrong with the way people in radio think today.
And most of the marketers that seek 55+ or 65+ use visual media: online, TV, even print. That's because many / most of the products and services sell best with visual presentations: the joy of feeling better with a new prescription drug, the fun of a cruise, the help of a stair lift, the easy breathing from an inhaler.... It's that most of those senior items don't sell the product itself... they sell the satisfaction, relief, comfort, enjoyment to be obtained from having it.If there were a belief by the advertisers that investing significantly more in that audience works, there would be ad supported content aligned with it. As it is, there are very specific products/services that seek that audience and they spend on targeted placements.