Tony Santiago said:
But the reality here....a lot of the younger demos bailed out of the medium because they are not being offered something that they can associate to.
Actually, the younger demos (to me, that means 12-17 and 18-24) have not abandoned radio... over the course of the last 20 years, they have gradually listened less, but there is still considerable use of radio by both of those demos. The surprising thing is that no stations target 12-17 per se, yet teen usage is on the order of 92% weekly use.
Sure, in New York, you have a Z-100, a 92.3 Now, Hot 97, Pulse, etc. and in that sense we are luckier than other markets. Yet more of those in that demo are listening to their digital media players, listening to tunes at their convenience, that radio isn't touching.
Radio stations for the younger end of the sales demos, such as 18-34, exist in every multi-station market. I don't know of any rated market without some. And remember, not all younger demo persons like any form of pop music, whether it be Britney or dance or whatever. There are large percentages that listen to country, r&b, alternative rock, active rock, sports, AC, Hot AC, regional Mexican, etc., etc. and not anything in the broad genre that includes dance.
I may not be in the industry but I have studied enough to know that a format flip doesn't occur overnight. And in New York, someone did discover the dance format as an option and we have Pulse.
This may have been an option for the kind of facility that Pulse represents, but no full power NY FM to this point has found dance or country to be a real option. And yes, a change takes time as a format search takes around 90 days from the start of project design through interviewing and tabulation and presentation.
But taste does not change over a 3 to 6 month period, so the amount of time is irrelevant.
And since you brought up Miami, the reason why Cox did what they did is because a rock station flipped format in that market and they went for the immediate void. The Party numbers were actually good. Could they have varied the format a bit, certainly...but then that can be argued with a majority of stations. Yet the numbers were good, and let's face it....back to what YOU said about programmers with format changes and studies. If the station was successful with their classical format, which it was before the Party flip, then why change?
I presented some time ago the ratings trending... and Party peaked in its first half-year, and dwindled thereafter, The numbers were nowhere near "good" and the billing was dreadful. All this is in the context of an operation by one of the radio companies that gets it... Bob Neil is a programmer, and the other people surrounding him are programming aware.
WTMI was not successful as a classical station... it was undergoing the same issues as all classical stations have felt. It had slowly eroding numbers, and most of the listeners were over 55. Billing was declining and profitability was in jeopardy. This is the same thing that happened to stations ranging from KMZT in LA to WCLV in Cleveland and this is why the array of commercial classical stations is now a small handfull.
Just as all of us will wait. I'm just sayin', if what we are hearing now could be the direction 96.3 goes, then it will be more of an English/Spanish bounce. But the personalities, sweepers, etc will still mainly be in Spanish. I'm not seeing anything dramatic here...I just think, based on what I've been hearing, it will be a "tweak".
There are more formats that can be done in Spanish than in English. The issue is to what extremes a station in a place like NY can go and still serve a very varied constituency consisting of significant groups from at least 5 different countries, all of which have different core musical tastes.
Judging a "stunting" period is, of course, not rational. Were the format to be "tweeked" the station would not have blown off all the old listeners and would have simply "upgraded" to Kalle 2.0 with a better signal...
David, I go to VARIOUS clubs in the New York area....dance, Latin, you name it. I do that so as I can really study the crowds to see what directions things have to go for us. I hear what the DJ spins. On some of the Latin clubs, yeah...they spin some reggaetón and you do have some people dance to it. But in comparison to about 2003 or so, the amount of tracks a DJ spins with reggaetón has dwindled dramatically.
When I buy a club, I'll call you. Reggaetón, as an international genre is growing. Everywhere in Latin America there is more reggaetón being played than 5 years ago... and the genre has morphed into a variety of much more crossover flavors that are a big part of CHR. And pop stations in the US, which did not play reggaeton originally are now playing a good percentage of it.
But now, outside of Puerto Rico, the sound fizzled out.
Tell that to the listeners in Chile, where about half the playlists of CHRs is now reggaetón. Or in Argentina, or Perú or Colombia... where reggaetón is so strong that there are now local artists making big hits in the genre.
Your misunderstanding of the staying power of reggaetón and your dedication to "dance on the radio" show, in both cases, your inability to distinguish between clubs and radio.