OldGringo said:
SuperRadioFan said:
OldGringo said:
You are seeing KYSR exactly opposite of how the listeners are reporting to Arbitron. Perhaps you might rethink your postion, as you are outnumbered.
OF COURSE he's outnumbered!! You know statistics like the back of your hand, OldGringo....
He is outnumbered by the listeners who have already begun to express thier dislike for the changes in Star.
So you THEN know that HE is in a tiny minority of people in the World who actually have more than an average intelligence and IQ.
I have a more-than-average intelligence and IQ. I like to hear songs that I know and that have memories and feelings attached to them. I have spoken with adult listeners from the brightest to the dumbest, and I have never heard anyone compalin that radio did not play enough songs they had never heard of and never heard before.
Most people (listeners) in this country I would think are not the sharpest knife in the kitchen. And THAT is why we get in any language homogenized radio with overly repetitious formats ... YES that makes a lot of money for the broadcast management teams and owners.
I do not have such an elitist, demeaning and negative view of listeners. Some are brighter, some are not, some have more money, some do not. They are just Americans, and most adult Americans like familiar songs, not one unknown song after another.
I don't want to sound like an elitest, but shooot...
You are worse than an elitist. An elitist leaves each person to their own thing, and just thinks their thing is superior. You want to put down the rest of the folks, the ones that don't agree with you.
Radio programming is about finding common threads... and that is all a "format" is: a common thread that ties a group of people together. You are about taking down to people.
Serious question for you, David G..... If people who felt as you do were around radio broadcasting companies in the 1950's, 1960's, and 1970's how might that have changed the pop music icons we are all familiar with and the sound of pop music history?
I was around the industry in the 60's and 70's. I helped to make many of the artists you mention stars in Latin America. I also helped to find mass appeal salsa, cumbia, Spanish pop and ballad stars, ranging from Ruben Blades to Maria Conchita to Menudo to Juan Luis Guerra. I just did not try to sell through 10 new songs a week.
The average iPod has around 300 songs on it.
You assume incorrectly so many times in this post that it is beyond laughable, Old gringo...
What made Star successful in the first place was it's variety and it's image as a "cutting edge" type station... they are simply getting back to what they used to do... the people that have enjoyed them in the past are coming back in droves... people such as myself kind of didn't want to hear "Don't You Forget About Me" for the 1,187th time or "The Metro" for the 998th time... it's something called burn out... Hot AC listeners don't like their songs fried to death, unlike their AC counterparts...
If you look at Star's current top 100 songs, you'll see that there is A LOT of familiarity there...
The Killers When You Were Young
Evanescence Call Me When You're Sober
Snow Patrol Chasing Cars
Nickelback Far Away
Rob Thomas Street Corner Symphony
The Fray How To Save A Life
Goo Goo Dolls Let Love In
James Blunt Goodbye My Lover
The Red Hot Chili Peppers Tell Me Baby
Mat Kearney Nothing Left To Lose
Panic! At The Disco I Write Sins Not Tragedies
Ray LaMontagne Three More Days
Hinder Lips Of An Angel
KT Tunstall Suddenly I See
The All-American Rejects Move Along
Augustana Boston
Fall Out Boy Sugar, We're Goin Down
Gorillaz Dare
Green Day Holiday
Five For Fighting World
John Mayer Waiting On The World To Change
The Red Hot Chili Peppers Dani California
Rocco DeLuca & The Burden Colorful
Lifehouse You And Me
Blue October Into The Ocean
Blue October Hate Me
Rascal Flatts What Hurts The Most
Howie Day Collide
KT Tunstall Black Horse And The Cherry Tree
The Killers Somebody Told Me
The Fray Over My Head (Cable Car)
Goo Goo Dolls Stay With You
Five For Fighting The Riddle
Evanescence Bring Me To Life (w/ Paul McCoy)
Tim McGraw When The Stars Go Blue
Gnarls Barkley Gone Daddy Gone
John Mayer Belief
Ok Go Here It Goes Again
30 Seconds To Mars The Kill
Daniel Powter Love You Lately
Christina Aguilera Hurt
Dashboard Confessional Stolen
Better Than Ezra Juicy
Michelle Branch Everywhere
Fall Out Boy Dance, Dance
The Killers Mr. Brightside
Maroon 5 This Love
New Radicals You Get What You Give
Green Day Wake Me Up When September Ends
Train Drops Of Jupiter
Lenny Kravitz It Ain't Over 'til It's Over
Gwen Stefani Hollaback Girl
Avril Lavigne Complicated
The Cranberries Dreams
No Doubt Ex-Girlfriend
Sublime Santeria
No Doubt Spiderwebs
Gin Blossoms Hey Jealousy
Gnarls Barkley Crazy
Coldplay Speed Of Sound
Dave Matthews Band What Would You Say
Kelly Clarkson Behind These Hazel Eyes
Blind Melon No Rain
Kelly Clarkson Since U Been Gone
Kelly Clarkson Miss Independent
Moby South Side
Gorillaz Feel Good Inc.
Gwen Stefani Cool
Rob Thomas Lonely No More
The Cardigans Lovefool
Beck Loser
Third Eye Blind Jumper
Puddle Of Mudd Blurry
Green Day Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark If You Leave
Barenaked Ladies One Week
Jane's Addiction Jane Says
Nirvana Smells Like Teen Spirit
The Red Hot Chili Peppers Scar Tissue
Meredith Brooks Bitch
3 Doors Down Kryptonite
Shawn Mullins Lullaby
Lifehouse Hanging By A Moment
Linkin Park In The End
Dave Matthews Band Crash Into Me
Lenny Kravitz Are You Gonna Go My Way
Nickelback Savin' Me
U2 Beautiful Day
Fatboy Slim The Rockafeller Skank
Natasha Bedingfield Unwritten
Alanis Morissette Ironic
Sheryl Crow Soak Up The Sun
Blink-182 All The Small Things
The Red Hot Chili Peppers Other Side
Sugar Ray Every Morning
Pink Just Like A Pill
Jewel You Were Meant For Me
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Bottom line is Star's ratings are on the way up, the listeners completed online surveys and the station actually listened and made the changes and look, the ratings are up nearly 50% in 6 months... you can't deny the facts...