Only if the calendar also flips with the station -- flips back at least 35 years, when money could still be made by playing songs from those three decades.I had a dream that 94.5 was playing oldies as WNJO again.
I used to enjoy listening to WNJO before it became 94.5 The Hawk. I think that it’ll do well in the ratings if they flip 94.5 back to WNJO and play the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
I had a dream that 94.5 was playing oldies as WNJO again.
I used to enjoy listening to WNJO before it became 94.5 The Hawk. I think that it’ll do well in the ratings if they flip 94.5 back to WNJO and play the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
Commercial radio has become more homogenized than ever, and it was bound to happen when we allowed these media monoliths to coalesce.
I'm super-intrigued to know what makes you think a station playing music from five, six, and seven decades ago would "do well in the ratings." I mean, I can't conceive of any possible way for something playing such old music to do well. The theoretical audience for such a format would be (a.) too old for advertisers to want to reach and (b.) too dead for advertisers to want to reach. Don't read this with a mocking tone. I am really interested in knowing how you think it's possible that such a format would do well.I had a dream that 94.5 was playing oldies as WNJO again.
I used to enjoy listening to WNJO before it became 94.5 The Hawk. I think that it’ll do well in the ratings if they flip 94.5 back to WNJO and play the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
There are two reasons why radio has become even more uniform in formats and playlists in the last few decades.Commercial radio has become more homogenized than ever, and it was bound to happen when we allowed these media monoliths to coalesce.
I actually respectfully disagree. I think the internet has made everything more niche than ever. If you know what Vaporwave is, you'll get my point. Nightcore, hyperpop, plunderphonics, these are genres birthed completely off the internet. If you want to hear music that sounds like it's coming from another room, you can find millions of youtube videos or bandcamp artists that make solely that. Niche is an understatement lol.First, the Internet has "standardized" music nationally in each format or subset.
I actually respectfully disagree. I think the internet has made everything more niche than ever.
That is exactly what I said: the Internet has "standardized" music nationally in each format or subset.I actually respectfully disagree. I think the internet has made everything more niche than ever.
And some niche music tastes are so limited that OTA radio can't cover them. But the Internet makes exposure to those smaller genres both national and international.If you know what Vaporwave is, you'll get my point. Nightcore, hyperpop, plunderphonics, these are genres birthed completely off the internet. If you want to hear music that sounds like it's coming from another room, you can find millions of youtube videos or bandcamp artists that make solely that. Niche is an understatement lol.
There was a crew doing some construction work next door for over a month. They had the same radio station on all day, every day. I finally asked one of them about it, and he said that "that's the music we all like". I then asked what other music they liked, and they said, "none".I know it's purely anecdotal, but you can ask most people my age (mid-twenties) and you'll find that we listen to a huge range of stuff, and there's no single radio format that encompasses that. One of the many reasons younger people simple aren't listening to the radio.
Radio did not ignore the Internet. There's this guy who owns a big sports team now and appears on a TV show about entrepreneurs who made his first couple of billion putting radio stations on the web... more than 20 years ago.Anyway time to get off my soap box. You get my point. It's more than a generational gap, it's totally different worlds between radio and internet. Radio ignored the internet for so long, and now it's trying to catch up to the internet generations. Is it working is a whole other discussion.
What was that music that they all liked? What format was the station?There was a crew doing some construction work next door for over a month. They had the same radio station on all day, every day. I finally asked one of them about it, and he said that "that's the music we all like".
Regional Mexican.What was that music that they all liked? What format was the station?