My grandfather called the refrigerator an icebox, too.
@michael hagerty Granted, I'm an outlier, but I've been listening to radio my whole life practically, though I did get an iPod Nano back in 2009 or 2010, and I used it like everyone else at the time. I even dabbled in online streaming as far back as 2005 with Rhapsody, and file sharing with eDonkey2000, eMule, and eventually BitTorrent, so I was a model Millennial in that sense. I missed out on the Napster craze, though I had heard of it as far back as 2000.
It was all secondary to radio, though. I only gave up on radio – except as a source of news – for the past decade or so because basically there wasn't anything I wanted to listen to. Only recently, with the handful of actual oldies stations coming online that play the music I grew up listening to have I become more interested in listening to the radio again.
But again, I'm an outlier, so I don't represent the majority of my peers very well, if at all (I don't care much for any pop music more recent that maybe 1990, for example, in particular most "radio" music (music played on most modern CHR stations) recorded in the past 10 to 15 years or so, and I actually hate the recent trend of everything needing to sound like some sort of loud, angry sounding rap music).
In many ways, I seem to identify more like a Boomer at twice my age, maybe even older (early Rock n Roll is about as hard as I want to get most of the time, though there is some later rock from the 70s and early 80s that I don't mind. And then there's soft rock, AKA "yacht rock" (in my defense, millennials and zoomers are actually re popularizing that stuff a bit)).
Anyway, this is a fine subject and all, but what does it have to do with the title of this thread?
Yeah, I'm almost, kinda-sorta, pretty much in that category (not only did I grow up listening to oldies, but I also listened to lots of standards, and I was really into it (to the extent that I actually bought several box sets full of Big Band and swing stuff)).
Indeed!
c
Before anyone takes your comment and says "SEE?", it's good that you understand you are an outlier.
Over the years here, we've had a variation on this conversation regarding formats (Beautiful Music, Standards, Oldies, Jazz, Classical), with anecdotal evidence of young people liking those.
Now it's about radio itself, not any particular format, but the problem is still the same:
You need to have a whole lot of any given demo to actually listen, and listen all at once, for it to matter.
