When I visit Vallejo on March 19th, I have a listenCommercials and some previously retired talent.
I think KEXP is playing the long game in SF. I can't wait!
When I visit Vallejo on March 19th, I have a listenCommercials and some previously retired talent.
I think KEXP is playing the long game in SF. I can't wait!
Well, few places I've known (granted, I don't know many, but...) are as highly commercial as the Bay Area, so everything's all about making the most money possible.However, KEXP is walking a fine line and this move into the Bay Area could be their jump-the-shark moment. We'll see.
In the US, in 1983, I was the consultant for the flip of Top 40 WUNO "Radio Uno" in San Juan, Puerto Rico, to all news as "NotiUno". A few years later, music and block programmed WAPA went all news, as did 630 "Salsa 63" and, around 1981, WQII 1140.How far back do you have to go to find a successful all-news startup that didn't evolve into the format the way WBZ did? I'd submit that in North America, it's 680 News in Toronto, and that's 30 years ago this past summer. That was a straight flip from AM top-40 (!) to all-news, and it came with a big marketing push and a LOT of corporate patience, not to mention the luck of having that format all to itself in the country's #1 market.
It can be very transactional, sure. Honestly, most large cities are. That's where ambitious people go. But there's also the countercultural history with the resulting self-image of being countercultural - or at least the remnants of such a self-image - that's often used either to disguise the true intent of an activity or used to assuage guilt over the results of said activity.Well, few places I've known (granted, I don't know many, but...) are as highly commercial as the Bay Area, so everything's all about making the most money possible.
I can tell you plainly that very little of that attitude exists in the Lafayette/Moraga/Orinda area. People there are as snobby, pretentious, smug and capitalist as ever. Maybe worse, since they've benefitted greatly by the stock market's rapid and seemingly relentless rise and absurdly high real estate values.I saw more of that attitude than I probably would have seen, say, in Danville or in Silicon Valley.