I'm thinking, is WOGL making changes just for the sake of making changes? It doesn't seem logical.
In April 2022, WOGL relaunched as a Classic Hits station with the moniker "Big 98.1." Audacy also renamed a few other classic hits stations as "Big." WOGL got more uptempo, more white and less 70s. Almost no ballads, almost no dance or rhythmic songs. People on this board remarked it sounds a lot like Ben-FM. The upgrade worked. The station went from around #10 to around #7.
So why the switch now to more rhythmic music and more 2000s? Since the 1980s, Classic Hits stations have concentrated on music that was 25 to 35 years old. If today you are 54 years old, the upper end of the 25-54 demo, your high school years are roughly 35 years earlier. So that's why they play music from 25 to 35 years ago, with a few big hits minus and plus five years.
Why mess with that formula? Especially if Audacy owns an AC station in Philadelphia that is also targeting a similar but slightly younger demo? WOGL is #8 and WBEB is #6.
I have a hard time believing music tests six months ago said WOGL listeners want a rock-leaning classic hits format. Then a week ago, the tests told Audacy that listeners want a 1/3rd rhythmic playlist, including songs that only reached #15 on the Billboard Hot 100. Why re-invent the wheel?