> > Sounds like they've done another tweak of some
> significance.
> > Lots more '70s, including plenty of Hall & Oates and Seger
>
> > cuts they weren't playing before.
>
> Well, that'll seal up 3WS's hold on the "47 year-old woman
> who goes to weddings and office parties and dances in a
> circle with 4-5 others of the same age and sex" demo.
>
> I'm sorry, that was somewhat cynical.
No, that was dead-on accurate. It just shows how thin the 3WS playlist is that adding a scant handful of songs can be described as "plenty of Hall & Oates and Seger cuts they weren't playing before".
As many others in this forum has pointed out, 3WS and the rest of the Clear Channel second-string stations exist for one purpose -- protecting WDVE. I have to agree with all those who have said that Clear Channel would rather see all of their other stations tank than to have any of them pull listeners away from 102.5.
>
> > > 3WS still pulls good 25-54 numbers because they've
> tweaked
> >
> > > the format enough to skew younger. Pittsburgh is an old
>
> > > town, but old people don't buy enough stuff for national
>
> > > advertisers to be enticed.
> > >
> > > WKFB, WKHB, WJAS, WJPA can afford to play oldies and
> easy
> > > listening because they're not relying totally on agency
> > > buys--they get out and actually sell to the community.
> As
> > a
> > > result, they can do a true oldies/EL format
> (50s/60s/70s).
> >
> > > 3WS can't afford the manpower to do that--so they skew
> the
> >
> > > formats to the available buying public. As the 70s
> crowd
> > > hits the deadly 55, it'll be 80s music.
> > >
> >
>