Totally ridiculous. Song that both B 101 and TDY likely play. Same with Adele, Same with Rihanna. Not on a Classic Hits station in 2025. Maybe in 2030 or 2035The Lumineers!
Totally ridiculous. Song that both B 101 and TDY likely play. Same with Adele, Same with Rihanna. Not on a Classic Hits station in 2025. Maybe in 2030 or 2035The Lumineers!
Totally ridiculous. Song that both B 101 and TDY likely play.
As Miguelito stated, there are no rules. Each station decides what their target is and decides if they want to aim a little older or a bit younger than the "national average" for a format. A great deal may have to do, also, with whether a market is highly ethnic or whether it has lots of transplants from other parts of the country.The rule was a song had to be at least 25 years old before it was considered.
Again, depends on the target listener the station has decided on, often dependent on what the competition is for different age ranges.That puts us at 2000 and below. Playing Adele, Gotye, Coldplay makes no sense. Is Beyonce next?
That is a station decision. You can balance the music to lean older or younger, more male or more female, more or less ethnic. It is the choice and decision of each station.Classic Hits is supposed to break 50 50 Male to female.
Yeah, tell that to iHeart with CHR, Hot AC and AC, all leaning very female, in LA. Those three stations are among the highest billing in the whole country.And since you already have B 101 and TDY in your cluster...both super targeted to women...the last thing you should be doing is making 98.1 more female friendly.
If the market is highly ethnic, that is not a true statement.THis rhythmic music doesn't help you with men and may even drive some to MGK.
I disagree. Much of the appeal of Classic Hits is, we will know all the songs the station is playing. We don't have to adapt to something we're unfamiliar with. If the song is too new, it isn't classic hits.You keep focusing on one song played one time, and think that's enough to get the casual listener to switch to MGK. It's not. You're also only looking at WOGL and not looking at B101. They played Faithfully by Journey. Do you think they worried about taking away listeners from OGL??? Really? Do you think the BEB listener complained about a 40 year old song? No.
You have to look at THE BIG PICTURE. 98.1 mainly plays songs from the 80s. If they throw in one song from the 2000s, it will not cause a listener to pull out their encyclopedia to check when the song was originally released!!! They don't care. The bulk of the music is old, and that's good enough.
The “we” is changing. The station is phasing in songs for the next “we.”I disagree. Much of the appeal of Classic Hits is, we will know all the songs the station is playing.
WOGL added “Jumpin’ Jumpin’” by Destiny’s Child in the recent revamp."Is Beyonce next?" To that, I would say, "Is Beyonce next?" It's only a matter of time before you hear Destiny's Child on Big 98.1, and classic Beyonce probably won't be far behind.
As someone who spent most of their life in Latin America where decades are not such a culturally defining quality, I would allow considerable overlap between decades channels on Sirius. On the "60s Channel" if there are a few 1958 and 1959 songs that "fit" or some 1970 and 1971 songs that do the same, I would pay a lot of attention to what you say: artists that overlap the decades.Everyone needs to get away from the whole year/decade thing. SiriusXM divides its oldies/classic hits channels by decade, which means problems for artists whose hit-making years bridged two decades. Two groups I like to bring up as illustrations of how stupid this is are the Grass Roots and Three Dog Night. There's no reason for "One" and "Joy to the World" to be on different channels, nor does separating "Midnight Confessions" and "Sooner or Later" make any sense.
WOGL added “Jumpin’ Jumpin’” by Destiny’s Child in the recent revamp.
| 7:45 PM | EVANESCENCE | Bring Me To Life | 2003 | G |
Classic Hits stations should not be playing very much from the 2000s.....yet. I truly believe you are not meeting listener expectations...P1 Classic Hits listeners when you are playing music less than 25 years old. Let's watch the ratings over the next several months and see.Everyone needs to get away from the whole year/decade thing. SiriusXM divides its oldies/classic hits channels by decade, which means problems for artists whose hit-making years bridged two decades. Two groups I like to bring up as illustrations of how stupid this is are the Grass Roots and Three Dog Night. There's no reason for "One" and "Joy to the World" to be on different channels, nor does separating "Midnight Confessions" and "Sooner or Later" make any sense.
I think there's nothing wrong with a classic hits station in 2025 playing Adele's or the Lumineers' early-2010s hits. Where stations that are still playing pre-hip-hop and pre-boy-band music now need to tread carefully is adding hip-hop and boy bands, although some hip-hop could work in a city like Philadelphia.
Classic Hits stations should not be playing very much from the 2000s.....yet.
Why not? Classic Hits stations are targeted to listeners 35-64. A 35 year old graduated high school in 2007.Classic Hits stations should not be playing very much from the 2000s.....yet. I truly believe you are not meeting listener expectations...P1 Classic Hits listeners when you are playing music less than 25 years old. Let's watch the ratings over the next several months and see.
What a lot of folks don't factor in is that a song must "fit" the format it is played in. In research, we often find songs that are well liked, but which just don't fit the format. One thing is "variety" and another is the equivalent of selling fishing rods in a perfume store.Why not? Classic Hits stations are targeted to listeners 35-64. A 35 year old graduated high school in 2007.
Sure, but you also have to move with the times. It has been 18 years since WOGL flipped to Classic Hits. Back then, the music library was centered around 1974 or 1975, with 10-12 years on either side of that center. In a nutshell, nothing before the Beatles and nothing after Michael Jackson.I disagree. Much of the appeal of Classic Hits is, we will know all the songs the station is playing. We don't have to adapt to something we're unfamiliar with. If the song is too new, it isn't classic hits.
They might know, but how would you (or anyone) describe it? Broadly speaking, IMO WBEB probably wouldn't play Kendrick Lamar, you probably won't hear Stevie Nicks on WTDY, and WOGL is still probably your best bet to hear the Rolling Stones. But what's the breakdown here, musically and/or demographically? The "oldies" format musically became incredibly familiar by the time it was on its way out, and while "classic hits" is essentially the modern version of the format, Evanescence and Destiny's Child feel like two sides of two totally different coins. While I believe the blend of genres is probably similar to how it was in, say, 1999, growing up with these songs and artists fragmented into their genres makes me feel like WOGL is an iPod on shuffle. I'm not saying they're wrong or that it shouldn't be, I'm just trying to understand that programming mindsetThey know where one station ends and the other one begins.
They already do. The '50s channel includes Doo-Wop hits from the early '60s. The '70s channel includes some music from 1969 like "Sweet Caroline". And the '80s channel includes some New Wave music from the late '70s like "Video Killed the Radio Star", "Train in Vain", and "Heart of Glass", as well as some early '90s music like "King of Wishful Thinking" and "I Can't Dance".I would allow considerable overlap between decades channels on Sirius. On the "60s Channel" if there are a few 1958 and 1959 songs that "fit" or some 1970 and 1971 songs that do the same, I would pay a lot of attention to what you say: artists that overlap the decades.
In only tiny amountsThey already do.
Which also charted in 1970. In fact, a most of the Sirus/XM songs that have possible ties to an earlier or later decade were "crossover" songs that got airplay and, often, chart activity across two years.The '50s channel includes Doo-Wop hits from the early '60s. The '70s channel includes some music from 1969 like "Sweet Caroline".
Once again I feel the need to remind what the true purpose of all commercial radio formats are: to sell advertising to certain demographics.They might know, but how would you (or anyone) describe it? Broadly speaking, IMO WBEB probably wouldn't play Kendrick Lamar, you probably won't hear Stevie Nicks on WTDY, and WOGL is still probably your best bet to hear the Rolling Stones. But what's the breakdown here, musically and/or demographically? The "oldies" format musically became incredibly familiar by the time it was on its way out, and while "classic hits" is essentially the modern version of the format, Evanescence and Destiny's Child feel like two sides of two totally different coins. While I believe the blend of genres is probably similar to how it was in, say, 1999, growing up with these songs and artists fragmented into their genres makes me feel like WOGL is an iPod on shuffle. I'm not saying they're wrong or that it shouldn't be, I'm just trying to understand that programming mindset
They might know, but how would you (or anyone) describe it?