robnokshus06 said:ChannelFlipper said:Dave said:The way I see it, KLOS is rapidly losing ground to The Sound, which is for all intents and purposes is a classic rock station, and the only way to save it is if it wants to continue to identify as a rocker, go a bit younger. I'm not talking full-tilt active (not yet, anyway), but inject more Metallica, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Soundgarden, Green Day, Foo Fighters etc. into the mix, and maybe throw in a few currents, too.
Just a suggestion...
They tried that before with disastrous results.
The music hasn't changed in the last six months, the morning show has. The lackluster effort that management put into the search for a replacement for Mark and Brian resulted in a predictably uninspiring choice of Heidi and Frank. The market had already passed on the Heidi, Frosty and Frank show at least two times in the past, so why did management think that taking the best broadcaster of the three out and putting the remaining two on the air would actually work? The effort and poor results should be a fire-able offense.
We get that you're an H&F hater Flipper, but c'mon. "The market" passed on Frosty, Heidi & Frank? I will agree that the KABC experiment did not go very well, but nothing seems to go very well over there. As for KLSX they were consistently #1 in their target demo of men 25-54. "Management" did not remove Frosty from the team. He left to pursue his own interests and is now doing mornings in San Francisco. After Frosty split, Heidi & Frank went on to have the most successful subscription streaming podcast in the country and are recognized pioneers in the digital space. Also, KLOS' ratings have been in a slide since March of last year, well before the arrival of Heidi & Frank. If anything, they have helped to stabilize the decline in AM drive. Finally, making grand pronouncements based on the Christmas book makes you look un-informed. Pretty hard to judge the performance of a show on only 4-months. Your post might be a better fit on Tumblr.
Not so much of a hater, more of a disliker. I have tried to give them a fair shot on multiple morning drives and they're just not doing it for me - I get that others may like them just fine. To each his own. I would rather hear tunes in the morning anyway so whether it was M&B who I did like, or H&F who I don't, my dial is usually elsewhere anyway.
But my analysis isn't based on what I like or don't like, my analysis is based purely on the business management side and the terrible job management made in the selection process, the really clumsy and awkward transition (did you hear their lame call with Mark back in NC on one of their first shows where Mark is clearly half-heartedly giving them his on-air handing off of the baton and inherent approval for management's choice? I mean really bad radio for all parties involved), the lack of any real promotion for the new show aside from a few stray billboards, and the fact that they simply were not the best choice to begin with, and if they were, I refer you back to the crummy selection process, which clearly did not interview nearly enough prospective talents for such a high profile gig.
I don't have breakout numbers so I don't know if they have "stabilized" mornings or not, but I do know that M&B significantly outperformed the rest of the dayparts when they were there and thus were largely responsible for carrying the station. The overall 6+ has gone from the mid twos to now the high ones. I know it is all about the demos and not the 6+, but when you get a significant drop like that, it is not because the kids that are too young and the geezers who are too old for the demo suddenly tuned out it mass - they had to have lost in demo too. I think enough time has gone by where those with actual access to the demos could provide some useful comparatives.