K.M. Richards
Program Director, The Eighties Channel™
Understanding the wants and needs of your P1 listener is essential to any successful radio station. And the P1 listener expects to hear AC DC and not Christopher Cross when they tune in. An April fools gag is one thing. But to turn your radio station into something totally different for three days is dangerous. Since LA is a PPM market, there will be real time results that the station can see from this weekend.
You really don't understand how PPM works, do you?
Go back and reread post #58, in which David correctly explains the lesser role of weekends in terms of what the agencies look at for buys.
A holiday weekend, when it's entirely within the realm of reality that a lot of PPM wearers are likely to be outside their home market -- and therefore, any incidental listening in whatever market they are vacationing in won't be counted -- it makes sense for stations to do something "special" for the remaining listeners.
I'll take what we're doing at KRKE as an example: Tomorrow, starting at noon, we're rerunning the American Top 40 special "Top Acts of the 80's", followed by a rare repeat of "Tribute to the King of the Countdown" which was hosted by Kerri and Mike Kasem after their father's death (which is rarely played anywhere these days) and then the "Top Hits of the 80's" special. All told, ten hours taking up all afternoon and most of the evening. Am I worried that the regular audience will wander in, and then leave because we're not running the regular format?
Not in the least.
Going back to my comment in post #55, your "warning" is coming from an uninformed position. You simply do not understand the bigger picture that those of us in programming position do.


