DavidEduardo said:neo11 said:12+ doesn't matter. How will it do in the demo breakdowns? Jack wasn't setting the world on fire there either but it did crack the top 10 25-54, probably skewing towards the younger end of that group.
Jack had an average age of 43, so it was in the "older half" of 25-54.
CBS-FM, even the new, updated version we're hearing now, will likely skew on the older side of the 25-54 scale.
Based on other "classic hits" stations, CBS-FM should average 45 to 47... just a bit older than Jack was. The old CBS-FM had a 51 average age in its last full book.
The updated CBS-FM is also playing plenty of stuff from the 70s and 80's that's already been burnt to a crisp by the likes of Lite FM, KTU, the former Mix 102.7 and even a little bit by PLJ. Just because CBS-FM wasn't there to play many of those songs for two years doesn't mean no one else did.
It is more than a guess that CBS tested before launching. And it is likely that they found that the "brunt out songs" to people on message boards are actually the ones listeners to whatever we call CBS-FM today want to hear a lot.
Every time I hear about played out songs on these boards, I know that those songs are likely to be the biggest testing songs against the real audience.
hipporadio said:Element9 said:And Sam [Lit]... Your old man was a legend...
And Sam... With MUCH due respect... My father grew-up with your father on the radio in Philly [Landsdowne/Upper Darby to be exact]... He celebrated his SEVENTY-FIFTH birthday yesterday... I also loved WIBG on summer visits to my Grandmother and the Jersey shore, but I discovered them as an early-teen in 1971. CCR, CSN&Y, and the Stampeders were modulating 990AM – NOT Johnny Mathes and “The Jailhouse Rock”.
hipporadio said:Oh my goodness... I’m agreeing with ONE-HUNDRED PERCENT of a D.E. post – in the same week as I gave CBS Radio a “thumbs-up”... What could possibly be next – a trip to my broker to buy CCU stock? Could David be “coming to the table” [much like CBS-FM did], or may we have disagreed [in prior exchanges] over semantics and/or misconceptions? Overall David, it isn’t “a stretch” to conclude [here at R-I] that you are far from enthused about the prospects of an “Oldies” station... I guess that depends on the widely-varied definition of such. Could we be seeing these differing definitions as reason for the current discourse on display here now?
David, I couldn’t agree with you more on the prospects for a station that hangs out in the late-50s and early-60s... Recall my polite response to Sam Lit in the “Epitome” ...
In another topic on the 60s/70s Classic Hits board [where we WERE NOT debating the “merits” of Johnny Mathis or “The Jailhouse Rock”], I called early attention to the onset of PPM as a possible benefactor for “pre-modern music stations”... YOU DISAGREED and launched your usual attack. I countered [paraphrase]; “fine, but there’s four battling in the market I live in”... You sniped in a one-line response: “What market would that be?” [Do I detect some condescension in that remark?] Is it unreasonable to conclude that [despite your current appreciation for “newer oldies”] you’re disposed to contemporarily-dismiss most pre-90s radio AND nearly any market outside a top-20 ranking?
That market would be the “insignificant and seldom-recalled” city of Charleston, S.C. :....Charleston’s heritage and perennially-successful Oldies outlet has been WXLY, but CCU’s recent treatment of it comes just shy of the fate that initially befell CBS-FM. Its lower-octane late-60s/70s/early-80s pop-rock-based FM competition has goated it into a flip-fest that nearly-equals that of a circus acrobat! The stations that are giving ‘XLY its painful case of acid-reflux are presented in a similar fashion to that being criticized on the new CBS-FM. Meanwhile over on AM; Mr. Mathis resides on a PC in the CCU-cluster broom closet [a quickie-replacement for failed "progressive talk"], and The Jailhouse Rocks a demure [albeit “delightful”] suburban daytimer. There is little interest [and even fewer ratings] on both! I suppose the forces of the marketplace have dully-appointed the appropriate broadcast facilities based on the public’s disposition to listen. Ironically, the “casualty” [when one considers the mere technical facility and history alone] is the formerly-beloved WXLY which appears to have lost much of what John Covey would call “a positive emotional bank account” with its public. They wandered from their past [appropriately], but they fall short of a firm commitment to their future. Maybe Mr. Mason needs to schedule a “working vacation” in ChuckTown!
Barry45RPM said:I have to admit, what they have been playing since Friday, has largely been played out and IS burnt, and they are repeating much too much stuff.
Are you in radio?
lalumia said:8)Jack sucked, it was the worst and now, Thank God, IT'S GONE!!!!
and the white people are just gonna have to get over it!!!!
DavidEduardo said:Why in the world woud there be multiple stations in the oldies / classic arena if the market has such a high ethnic population. Sounds like so much fragmentation that nobody can win.
Oldies Cat said:Barry45RPM said:I have to admit, what they have been playing since Friday, has largely been played out and IS burnt, and they are repeating much too much stuff.
Are you in radio?
No, I do not make a living in Radio. Almost bought a suburban station years back, and have been an advertiser on Radio for my Retail Business. I always loved the business of Radio, not sitting in a room wearing a set of cans & entertaining... although I can see how people love that end too.
Of course, this means the suits have to keep their hands off an dinvest in a good music director or PD who can do this the right way.
PeteRFNY said:Great post - can't wait to see the first CBS-FM book. Just on the curiosity factor alone, it should be silly.
Oddly enough, I have heard with my own two ears (and seen with my own two eyes) so-called "oldies" stations that have had listeners that ranged from teens to grandpas by playing a decent mix of actual "Top 40" from the 60s, 70s and 'format-friendly' 80s choices, plus a smattering of "timeless 50s" classics. The way it was accomplished was by the presentation. Amazingly, you can find out sometimes that music is just MUSIC, and if presented the right way, people will listen to it. Throw in some personality, a few off-the-path oddities and steer away from "40 minutes of music followed by 20 minutes of commercials". Programmers love that - listeners HATE it.
Another lost key is just to not hit listeners over the head with the fact that they're listening to "oldies" so much. Yes, for some that's a comforting term - for others, it's a stigma as all they hear in "oldies" is "old". Just play the music. People that are over 40 already know they are over 40 - they don't need to be constantly reminded of that by having "the songs you grew up with" hammered into their skulls. They already know that the AARP is on the horizon.
While we are at it, enough with goofy consultant-fed slogans that induce vomiting. Maybe right now these AREN'T such "good times", and these might not be such "great oldies" to me. Maybe I want to hear some "bad times, lousy oldies"! SHUDDUP!
Alas, while I have seen the above formula be successful in small places where people are more likely to take risks, it's not gonna happen in New York or any other "top" market. But boy, it sure would be fun.