> > > >
> > > And a couple of countryboy shazaaams!
> > >
> >
> > Always quick with the ad-hominems, aren't you. Do you ever
>
> > actually post any information that may help a person
> > understand radio better, or do you sepcialize in the niche
>
> > format of detraction?
> >
>
>
> I bet you're a real hoot to have at a party... David my boy.
No, I simply posted a response about Arbitron methodology that included specific references to weighting and incentives, and received razzberries.
>
>
> The only thing that I have seen you contribute is that "all
> music formats are meeting the needs of all people all the
> time and that everyone is happy with radio."
See above.
The fact is I _do_ object to the "radio is dead" posts because they contain false data. I will continue to object to such posts as it is necessary to keep radio vital, but not by looking at incorrect data.
>
> You know, the ol'head in the sand trick!
This should just get the "sez you" response but I will expand: in the 70's, 94 to 95 percent of Americans listened to radio weekly. Today, the figure in most markets is between 94 and 95%. So saying that fewer people are listening is not true. And the erosion in TSL per person is nowhere near as severe wen compared with history.
There have always been theings in radio that need fixing. Focusing on the wrong things... ones that don't need fixing... hurts radio faar more than a few iPods or XM radios.
>