But just let me ask you -- is he disliked because he was never in radio and is seen as a naive outsider?
That is probably part of it. I have not found any proof of his working in the industry. By comparison, the late Don Barrett had an extensive history in radio management, including being the GM of 100.3 here in L.A. just before Bill Drake took it top-40 as K-100. (I am reasonably certain that Gary Lycan was at the
Orange County Register for his entire career and just happened to be a journalist who understood that a "radio news" column had to have its emphasis on current events.)
His column is less about what is happening in radio today and more his personal soapbox in which he laments every format that is no longer viable and wishing for time to move backwards in that regard. In fact, I sometimes think he wants us to go back to turntables and cart machines.
That is what the dislike is about. It is
not personal; I have met him in person and found him to be very likeable. As David and BigA have said, it is his disconnect from reality about the current state of the business that causes the negative reactions to his column. I agree with every word in their two replies.
I notice that you have a programming service which programs 80's music which happened 40 years ago. Is there a difference between music that happened 40 years ago and music that happened 60 years ago? Isn't both that music out-of-date and out of touch w/ a desirable age 18-34 demographic that advertisers favor?
That is a very reasonable question, and I originally designed the format to be Baby Boomer-oriented. I was as surprised as anyone to discover that the music from that decade was appealing to younger demographics. (There have been many theories discussed as to why, but I will not rehash them here.) The bottom line is that the format is mass appeal across a wide spectrum of demographics, and as it turns out only about one-third of the audience is 55+. This is why you will often find one or another of us repeating the mantra "in Classic Hits, all that matters is what gold titles the audience wants to hear
today."
There is no way for a 50s/60s Oldies format to program for a mass appeal audience. The music simply has fallen out of favor in terms of being playable in the frequencies needed to sustain a format. The regular audience for such a format is 65+ and that is not a saleable audience either nationally or locally.
Put simply, Classic Hits is very much centered on the 80s, and I simply have tightened that focus to have a format identity which relates to the listeners. (I'm just glad they like it.)