Let's attempt to put this thread to bed once and for all. Kids liking "Wooly Bully" and wearing Pink Floyd T-shirts don't represent a significant current or future audience for oldies radio. Most are listening to oldies because their parents or grandparents liked that that music when it was current or because the tunes are dumb but catchy and kids find them fun. (Or, in the case of the classic rock T's, the kids don't give a crap about the music but wear the garb because they don't want to hurt Gramps' feelings, even though they would have greatly preferred toys or gaming stuff to clothing for a Christmas gift.)
That's not the profile of people who are still going to be listening to Sam the Sham or wearing replicas of ancient tour shirts when they reach their 20s and begin to matter to radio's advertisers. Chances are that, as young adults, they'll be into whatever popular music most 20-somethings are into at the time, whether it's pop or rock or hip-hop or country or R&B. And their parents and grandparents will feel about that music the way most of ours felt about "our music" when we were in our 20s: They'll think it's junk and that their generation's music was the best ever and will live forever. Can we just accept this and accept that '60s-'70s oldies is a dying format and is not coming back to FM, no matter how much we like it, because once the kids develop their own musical tastes and leave the nest, they'll leave most of that music behind?
That's not the profile of people who are still going to be listening to Sam the Sham or wearing replicas of ancient tour shirts when they reach their 20s and begin to matter to radio's advertisers. Chances are that, as young adults, they'll be into whatever popular music most 20-somethings are into at the time, whether it's pop or rock or hip-hop or country or R&B. And their parents and grandparents will feel about that music the way most of ours felt about "our music" when we were in our 20s: They'll think it's junk and that their generation's music was the best ever and will live forever. Can we just accept this and accept that '60s-'70s oldies is a dying format and is not coming back to FM, no matter how much we like it, because once the kids develop their own musical tastes and leave the nest, they'll leave most of that music behind?
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