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1260 Going Country Gold

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They switched off the Taylor Swift on Wednesday. I listened a couple times. Lots of "deep cuts" that I'd never heard of. Mixed with the noisy signal - not a great listen. Haha
there were definitely Taylor Swift songs being played I never heard on the radio before.
 
While I lament the loss of K-Surf on 105.1 HD4, I did listen to 1260 for the entirety of our ~50 minute drive to Costco yesterday, and my Dallas-raised partner knew quite a few songs.

However, I heard the same song at around 4:30 yesterday afternoon and then again at around 8pm.
 
Listening again today and I’m hearing a pretty fair amount of repetition. I would think with about three decades of music to choose from, there’d be a little more variety
 
I had it on yesterday for about a half hour, then an hour, and then another hour today. I wouldn’t exactly call that “all day” but I also haven’t listened to music radio with regularity in ages so perhaps the repetition is par for the course
 
I had it on yesterday for about a half hour, then an hour, and then another hour today. I wouldn’t exactly call that “all day” but I also haven’t listened to music radio with regularity in ages so perhaps the repetition is par for the course

Were the songs that got repeated CORE songs by top artists?
 
Stations don’t program their music playlists for people who listen all day.
Are "No Repeat Workdays" still a thing with AC/Classic Hits stations? They have a wide enough playlist spanning at least two decades and are geared towards people who work in offices... but nowadays, those same people are just as likely to listen to Spotify or podcasts in their cubicle.
 
Are "No Repeat Workdays" still a thing with AC/Classic Hits stations? They have a wide enough playlist spanning at least two decades and are geared towards people who work in offices... but nowadays, those same people are just as likely to listen to Spotify or podcasts in their cubicle.

At KRKE, we don't do any repeats between 6:00am and 7:00pm. We don't make a big deal about it, but we do have a couple of liners about every weekday being a "no repeat day".

You are correct in your observation about library size ... I have just enough powers in rotation to be able to do that, and lots more secondaries than I need. (And I don't need a second decade.)
 
Classic Country might soon reconsider having Garth Brooks as a core artists after new allegations of sexual battery and assault surfaced today.
 
Are "No Repeat Workdays" still a thing with AC/Classic Hits stations? They have a wide enough playlist spanning at least two decades and are geared towards people who work in offices...
Not any more. So few people listen in offices any more, as it is disruptive. In offices, if anyone listens, it is with earbuds because otherwise it disturbs others.

"Workplace" listening is more often in the loading dock or at the inventory desk in the warehouse or the stockroom at a store.

And stations have realized in the PPM markets that nobody listens "9 AM to 5 PM" to a station like they might in a diary. All day listening, is, in fact, a bunch of 10 to 20 minute tidbits interrupted by calls, other workers, bathroom breaks, coffee breaks, lunch hour, meetings and all kinds of other interruptions.

And that kind of frequently interrupted listening affects the listener's perception of repetition, because we now see that an 8 hour workday really means less than 3 total hours of actual-and-fragmented listening.
but nowadays, those same people are just as likely to listen to Spotify or podcasts in their cubicle.
And, similarly, with all kinds of interruptions. That is why the streaming "heard" count is vastly higher than the true actual listening because people spend a lot of time with the stream running while they have the volume muted or low so they can do other things.
 
Classic Country might soon reconsider having Garth Brooks as a core artists after new allegations of sexual battery and assault surfaced today.
And most of us will not convict him until the case is over. He is already counter-suing and investigating the possibility of pushing for a criminal charge.

Trump popularized the suing of celebrities'. Many lawyers figured out that famous and rich people might pay off such cases to avoid negative publicity, so we will be seeing even more suits by nannies, co-workers and just plain fans.
 
And most of us will not convict him until the case is over. He is already counter-suing and investigating the possibility of pushing for a criminal charge.

Trump popularized the suing of celebrities'. Many lawyers figured out that famous and rich people might pay off such cases to avoid negative publicity, so we will be seeing even more suits by nannies, co-workers and just plain fans.
He sued her first anonymously in Mississippi. Her lawsuit was just filed separately in Los Angeles:
 
Trump popularized the suing of celebrities'. Many lawyers figured out that famous and rich people might pay off such cases to avoid negative publicity, so we will be seeing even more suits by nannies, co-workers and just plain fans.
Or maybe because he's actually done a lot of shady stuff in his career? Trump's history of being involved in over 4,000 lawsuits dates back to 1973, when he was unknown outside of the NYC real estate business:


Defending Garth Brooks by saying "Trump gets sued a lot, too" is just about the worst defense I can think of...
 
Or maybe because he's actually done a lot of shady stuff in his career? Trump's history of being involved in over 4,000 lawsuits dates back to 1973, when he was unknown outside of the NYC real estate business:


Defending Garth Brooks by saying "Trump gets sued a lot, too" is just about the worst defense I can think of...

Sorry, David---I have to agree here.

And frankly, the cases Donald Trump has straight-up lost in court and been ordered to pay is a hell of a lot more incentive than out of court settlements that Trump usually smothers the details of under an NDA.


And PS to anyone even thinking about making a stink-----this is NOT political. It's about celebrities and lawsuits.
 
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