Happy Holidays!
On Thursday, a week before Thanksgiving, I was in Palm Beach County and heard numerous teases for Sunny 107.9’s (WEAT) usual flip to Christmas/seasonal music. It brought a smile to my face, not only because I get a kick out of all it, but because it’s such a departure from all the cloak & dagger stuff once associated with the seasonal format. By noon that day, the music reflected “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year.”
When going wall-to-wall holiday music was a new concept, it was often used like a Trojan Horse. Once Christmas was over, there would be a change in format, not always, but it was especially the reality that befell oldies formats 20+ years ago now.
With the cat out of the bag, there’s some return to normalcy. We don't see the playing of Christmas music as a strategy to get rid of something but to enhance what already exists. Again, not always but mostly. The expectation is that an AC format that has established itself as THE holiday music station in the listeners’ mind, will flip for X number of weeks generating a lot of buzz and receiving a nice uptick in the ratings.
Here on The Treasure Coast, 97.1 Ocean FM (WOSN) makes its seasonal flip the day after Thanksgiving like clockwork. There are no surprises, no other radio station jumps the gun in the 8 years I’ve lived here. For a short time, iHeart offered an oldies format via translator and heard on 107.9, the same frequency as WPB's Sunny. Perhaps a couple years ago now but they featured continuous “holiday favorites.” Just a terrible signal and so none of that mattered to either the listeners and certainly WOSN.
Before iHeart got that translator, the 107.9 signal from West Palm was heard nicely in all the coastal Treasure Coast and into around Melbourne in Brevard County as I recall. In my view, Hubbard Broadcasting does an outstanding job with the classic hits format it normally carries. Their playlist with some AC lean and interesting personalities are both entertaining and interesting. Their execution and programming is how I view the classic hits format and not one that’s more classic rock than anything else.
With just a 10-mile trek south on I-95, I can pick up Sunny 107.9 nicely. And so, for a good portion of The Treasure Coast, older adults have options from Ocean FM to Sunny 107.9 and to iHeart’s Classic Hits WQOL @ 103.7. It's an interesting part of Florida from a radio perspective. Change is always constant but older listeners do figure in advertising. I hear it all the time.
When I hear holiday classics on the radio, I also can’t help but think of stunting. Early on, we didn’t know it was even that when oldies formats were suddenly playing non-stop Santa and winter weather tunes before they got the axe.
We probably all have our favorites when it comes to stunting. For me, it was likely non-stop Beatles tunes. And sometimes, stunting was done in a way that I didn’t think was very professional or could even be considered mean-spirited.
Stay tuned for that & more.
On Thursday, a week before Thanksgiving, I was in Palm Beach County and heard numerous teases for Sunny 107.9’s (WEAT) usual flip to Christmas/seasonal music. It brought a smile to my face, not only because I get a kick out of all it, but because it’s such a departure from all the cloak & dagger stuff once associated with the seasonal format. By noon that day, the music reflected “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year.”
When going wall-to-wall holiday music was a new concept, it was often used like a Trojan Horse. Once Christmas was over, there would be a change in format, not always, but it was especially the reality that befell oldies formats 20+ years ago now.
With the cat out of the bag, there’s some return to normalcy. We don't see the playing of Christmas music as a strategy to get rid of something but to enhance what already exists. Again, not always but mostly. The expectation is that an AC format that has established itself as THE holiday music station in the listeners’ mind, will flip for X number of weeks generating a lot of buzz and receiving a nice uptick in the ratings.
Here on The Treasure Coast, 97.1 Ocean FM (WOSN) makes its seasonal flip the day after Thanksgiving like clockwork. There are no surprises, no other radio station jumps the gun in the 8 years I’ve lived here. For a short time, iHeart offered an oldies format via translator and heard on 107.9, the same frequency as WPB's Sunny. Perhaps a couple years ago now but they featured continuous “holiday favorites.” Just a terrible signal and so none of that mattered to either the listeners and certainly WOSN.
Before iHeart got that translator, the 107.9 signal from West Palm was heard nicely in all the coastal Treasure Coast and into around Melbourne in Brevard County as I recall. In my view, Hubbard Broadcasting does an outstanding job with the classic hits format it normally carries. Their playlist with some AC lean and interesting personalities are both entertaining and interesting. Their execution and programming is how I view the classic hits format and not one that’s more classic rock than anything else.
With just a 10-mile trek south on I-95, I can pick up Sunny 107.9 nicely. And so, for a good portion of The Treasure Coast, older adults have options from Ocean FM to Sunny 107.9 and to iHeart’s Classic Hits WQOL @ 103.7. It's an interesting part of Florida from a radio perspective. Change is always constant but older listeners do figure in advertising. I hear it all the time.
When I hear holiday classics on the radio, I also can’t help but think of stunting. Early on, we didn’t know it was even that when oldies formats were suddenly playing non-stop Santa and winter weather tunes before they got the axe.
We probably all have our favorites when it comes to stunting. For me, it was likely non-stop Beatles tunes. And sometimes, stunting was done in a way that I didn’t think was very professional or could even be considered mean-spirited.
Stay tuned for that & more.