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Are boomers NOT a good ad target?

oldiesstation said:
hope you are right..bobeeboxer.very logical..i grew up with these oldies and played them as new,that is scary...But stations are jumping off to the variety hits format.i've even thought about going to soft ac .i pitched a pgm to the local hospital ,when i told her we play oldies, i swear i thought she was going to vomit, of course she's alittle 30 year old that knows it all...there is a hole in the market for a good ac or soft ac, but our listeners and advertisers still love the station.like a catch 22, do we piss them off and change formats just to try for additional revenue.? our book was 1.3 12 plus, 3.6 18-34 and 5.6 50 plus. one thing we need to do is dump the oldies 106.9 jingles and moniker and maybe go with something like Q106.9,Super Hits of the 60's and 70's.i think the oldies name turns off some the the female demo's..working with my pd on this now.
Good Point... Our successful Oldies/Superhit station here headed it off at the pass and dropped the Oldies moniker earlier than I thought they would.. They jumped into Oldies when the 60's based Oldies station of many moons went to Hot Country... They flipped from an 18 month un-succesful run at the AC Top Dog....They made it 60's-70's based over the late 50's to the early 70's based defunct outlet... They've been a top fiver (2 to 5) in every book, since.....Going into this book they stopped the "Oldies 105.3, Home Of The Superhits of the 60's & 70's"... Now, it's just "Superhits of the 60's & 70's"....I will be curious to see their public 12+ numbers at the end of the spring book... :)
 
skippertthomas said:
They made it 60's-70's based over the late 50's to the early 70's based defunct outlet...

I'm trying to follow you here. Are you saying that the only change to the station's format was to drop 5 years of programming......................1955 thru 1959?
 
Re: Satellite radio

Maybe. But then, how many satellite receivers have more than ONE listener? And if that receiver was purchased by someone who is not currently being served by terrestrial radio, how many listeners in the demo desired by terrestrial are being exposed to that satellite receiver?
I highly doubt that. What person who has lived on this planet hasn't listened to radio?
And if they're not radio listeners, gee, I wonder why?
They've tuned in and heard the drek... whether wall-to-wall conservative talk radio or the same 300 songs over and over on odlies radio - or the bozo FM morning hosts to Stern who can't talk about anything other than his penis.

Satellite is the up and coming thing. You guys fighting for the leftover scraps of crappy AM-FM radio are the ones who are declining.

Fire most of your staff and turn a once "legacy" talk station into a satellite-fed service (with the exception of the morning drive), and water down the lousy oldies stations, you know what you get. Lousy radio. Lousy ratings. Lousy lousy radio.

It's so bad that on the NT board, they're talking about AM radio saving the FM band via talk radio.
 
Re: Satellite radio

Oldies Cat said:
For someone who spouts off a lot of facts on demos etc., the next to nothing statement sounds like a whopper to me.

15 million listeners? Next to nothing?

I believe that number they pedal out to us is subscribers. And, just because they subscribe isn't proof they actually listen much.
If we're sharing anecdotal information, I also know a number of friends and colleagues who bought a car with satellite capability that never actually
signed-up or let their original subscritpion expire.

As for your comparison to any other market, we can also look at it this way: how many of their subs are in areas that are not within rated
markets (due to lack of available signals)? How many only use it when they're traveling between cities/markets? Take the nearly 300 Arbitron markets
and divide by listening and it's even more scant.

So, overall, satellite radio is cool and hip- AND a drop or two in a big ocean of radio listening.
[/quote]
Satellite has more listeners than Rush-bo.
That's not important?

You guys need to read the writing on the wall.. the days of boring, stale radio are over.

If that comes through new media (i.e. satllite), that's all the better.
 
They mirrored a "Beatles Weekend" and then basically played few 1959 to 1964 tunes, limited... The core went to 1964 to about 1977... Then over the past three books they've moved further up the timeline.. Now, it's a few selected dayparted songs from 1959 to 1964 and a ton of stuff up to about 1980.... Tom Kent is a killer for them in the evening and Tom in auto pilot mode overnight.... :)
 
amfmsw said:
Yes, probably 45% of oldies listeners are 50+, all of that is 50-64! Only 5% over 64! That leaves approximately 50% 35-49 y.o. It is not a 55+ format. And, sirs, I have been doing sales for 20 years. There are MANY buys 35-64, and I get premium rates for that demo.

KOOL, one of the most successful oldies stations in the US, has 36% 55-64 and 14% 65+. 50% is over 55. Same, but moreso for KRTH in LA. In general, oldies stations are 50% or more in 55+.

I don't know what market you have sold in, but in LA, with 5% of all the US' radio revenue, there were no 55+ buys up last near, from local, regional or national agencies. And old demos are tough to sell since the trend is to 18-49 from 25-54 on buys.

I laughed out loud last night, remembering the comment about 18-49 year old having the most disposable income. My 21 yo son needed another $300 for school, $20 for gas. My 19 yo asked for help in buying a car. Both boys work, the elder has 2 jobs! Who has the disposable income? Your claims are unfounded.

You forget that persons nearing retirement are in a model of trying to save and not spend, since the average American has less than $100 thousand dollars saved beyond the value of their house at retirement age. This is a horrible demo for advertising, as agency accounts know.

If either of you are in the business, you have drank the kool-aid. You have been misled. Just because Oldies Formats are being deleted, it does NOT mean it was the correct decision. Proof? The disaster, complete colapse, of WCBS-FM, the success of sister station WOGL. The sky truly is blue, and Boomers money is very, very green.

WOGL's revenues are off every one of the last 5 years. Yet the market istself is up.

Again, in LA, last year, there were no 55+ buys. I checked with our local GM and GSM, who confirmed this. Over the next decade, 35-64 may become a salable demo, but for the moment, there is a wall at age 55.

Oh, I have been selling since 1964...
 
Oldies denial

I just think a lot of this is disc jockeys who don't want to let go. Unless you (radio folks) have been living in a cave, the backlash against
radio for the demise of the Oldies format has been 99.999% from radio people, not from the public. And, most radio people are ticked off because they equate Oldies' fading away with THEM fading away. I assure you, most of the listening public has moved on to alternative sources if they want their Oldies that badly.

Even when those in New York tried to stage a massive protest when CBS-FM got blown up, only about 200-300 people showed up.

The way Oldies was done for more than 20 years is changing. Get over it.
 
Re: Oldies denial

Oldies Cat said:
Even when those in New York tried to stage a massive protest when CBS-FM got blown up, only about 200-300 people showed up.
So what? You're trying to deman those who got off their butts and tried to do something productive?

Isn't the conventional wisdom that one letter written to a radio or TV station or congressman usually represents 1,000-10,000 people, because most won't bother to contact a station?

Once again, your facts are off.

You can't admit you're in a dying medium. Satellite will soon overtake you and your mediocre formats.

Satellite radio already runs circles around you narrow, tunnel-vision types who just can't understand why anyone would complain against your neat little world.
 
Re: Oldies denial

Don62 said:
Satellite will soon overtake you and your mediocre formats.

Let's dismiss this one again.

1. XM and Sirius lost $1.5 billion dollars last year.
2. XM and Sirius agreed to a merger because sales were way off both projections and 2005 levels and there is no end in sight to looses.
3. At the current 14 million subscribers, satellite is way behing the 230 million who use terrestrial radio.
4. Satellite subscribers are actually higher users of terrestrial radio than non-subscribers.
5. The formats on satellite, except for a couple of shows specializing in profanity, are significant duplications of terrestrial formats.
6. The satellite formats that are not duplications are the ones that can not be advertiser supported.
7. Satellite radio does not ammount to more than a few percent of all radio listening.

Satellite is in major trouble, with declining subscription rates, huge losses and $600 million dollar satellites with finite lifespans... with no profits.
 
denial

Don62 said:
Oldies Cat said:
Even when those in New York tried to stage a massive protest when CBS-FM got blown up, only about 200-300 people showed up.
So what? You're trying to deman those who got off their butts and tried to do something productive?

Isn't the conventional wisdom that one letter written to a radio or TV station or congressman usually represents 1,000-10,000 people, because most won't bother to contact a station?

Once again, your facts are off.

You can't admit you're in a dying medium. Satellite will soon overtake you and your mediocre formats.

Satellite radio already runs circles around you narrow, tunnel-vision types who just can't understand why anyone would complain against your neat little world.

My facts are solid. And, hey, hats off to you if you want to continue living in denial. The public has barely raised it's voice over the Oldies format fading and it doesn't please me to know that. But some of us live in the real world of radio in 2007, not what to many is the ideal world of radio from 1977.

By the way, how ARE those satellite radio stocks performing these days? How are their profits right now? Any business, not just radio, that cannot generate a profit will not survive. Not the computer business, not the fast food business, not the home improvement business- and NOT the satellite radio business.
 
Catman...I guess the exact percentages depend on the market served. However, the reason many owners have dropped out of the format is twofold.

1. the same reason most stations only play 400 songs ad nauseum...consultants trying to justify their outrageous fees and make themselves relevant to holding on to launch a new format.

2. Owners who like the format, but arer not willing to pay for experienced salepeople who know who to target, how to approach, teach the prospect the benefits of the format and listener profile, and when to sell what. Most, not all, have young men and women, full of piss and vinegar, ready to prove themselves. But they don't know how or who to sell the format too. You don't sell Oldies Listeners to Buy Here-Pay Here car dealers and Tattoo Parlors. Those are for the Hip-Hop Crowd.

And just last week, I sold an annual schedule to a bank looking for Persons 35-64, the product was New Business Accounts. Then another to a Major Bank whose agency stated the target was Men 35-54 for ATM useage and Visa Points. Last Month, the very SAME Major bank bought an entirely different Persons 45-63 demo for CD's. There are dozens of demo combinations, not just the mythical 25-54. That isn't a demo, it's an entire generation! What does any 25 year old have in common with a 54 year old?

After all YOU say that anyone THAT old won't buy new technology, try new things, or won't try new brands.
 
boomers

The "same 400 songs" and cheap shots at consultants have not thing one to do with Oldies' fall-off over the past five years.

As far as the schedule you sold, congratulations. I'm not saying that here and there you can't do what you did, I'm saying that in most markets Oldies stations can't generate enough revenue with an order here and there. In most markets where the most revenue is (Top 50 markets), THE demos are 18-49 and 25-54 (and certain sub-sets within those cells)- nothing mythical, it is what it is. You're not incorrect on the Sales subject- there's too much pressure to hit your number this week, this month, this quarter and, unfortunately, that makes it difficult to properly train younger Account Execs. On the other hand, you and I both know a 24 year old has little interest selling a format that's targeted at their parents age group; doesn't matter whether it's right or wrong, to them it's just not cool & hip & sexy to be associated with. We can talk all we want about the ideal world of radio sales and demos and so on but that doesn't have any affect on what IS in today's radio environment.

I don't disagree with you that a 25 year old and a 54 year old have almost nothing in common but if all we do is focus on "what should be", we'll go down with the format.

But the bottom-bottom-line is: most advertisers see no long-term future in targeting 55+ consumers. I don't like it, I don't agree with it, but that's the way it is. If you want to spend the rest of your radio career fighting an incredibly uphill battle, fine. Even if you win a battle here and there, you will ultimately lose the war and anybody with any sort of vision or foresight can see that very clearly. Either change as your industry changes or get left behind.
 
amfmsw said:
1. the same reason most stations only play 400 songs ad nauseum...consultants trying to justify their outrageous fees and make themselves relevant to holding on to launch a new format.

Consultants do not have anything to do with playlist size. The listeners do. When you test music, the results determine the depth of the playlist. A cutoff is established using minimum "like" scores on a variety of groups, such as P1, P2, men, women, older half, younger half, etc. Whatever is above the minimum is playable. The minimum is based on not being negative and, hopefully, at least mildly above neutral.

2. Owners who like the format, but arer not willing to pay for experienced salepeople who know who to target, how to approach, teach the prospect the benefits of the format and listener profile, and when to sell what. Most, not all, have young men and women, full of piss and vinegar, ready to prove themselves. But they don't know how or who to sell the format too. You don't sell Oldies Listeners to Buy Here-Pay Here car dealers and Tattoo Parlors. Those are for the Hip-Hop Crowd.

Owners like formats that make money. To do that in rated markets where there is transactional (meaning numbers-driven) business, you have to have salable numbers in sales demos. 55+ is not a sales demo. No matter how good a salesperson you have, they can not change the demos on transactional agency business as the agency is not going t0 violate the client-established demo.

And just last week, I sold an annual schedule to a bank looking for Persons 35-64, the product was New Business Accounts. Then another to a Major Bank whose agency stated the target was Men 35-54 for ATM useage and Visa Points. Last Month, the very SAME Major bank bought an entirely different Persons 45-63 demo for CD's.

I am guessing this is a small bank that buys direct. The number of buys that include 55-64 are minimal, and seldom seen in larger markets. Definitely not enough to support a station.

There are dozens of demo combinations, not just the mythical 25-54. That isn't a demo, it's an entire generation! What does any 25 year old have in common with a 54 year old?

Nobody said that all buys are 25-54. But nearly everything is somewhere inside 18-54. Men 21-44 is the normal beer target, for example. Some target by age, sex and ethnicity. Some even have geographic targets inside a metro based on store locations. But nearly 100% of buys are inside the 18-35 confine... a recent Inside Radio article mentioned the trend is to 18-49 and not 25-54 because so few agency accounts can get an ROI off even 50+, let alone 55+.

After all YOU say that anyone THAT old won't buy new technology, try new things, or won't try new brands.

It is not about whether they buy or not. It is about how much you have to spend to get them to buy. The proven facts at the client side of the equation is that spending agaonst 50+ and 55+ has an inadequate or non-existent ROI. The ad expenditures to create consumption are greater than the profit on the sale.
 
Cat & Ed...you BOTH have some correct and valid points in your replies. I understand what you're trying to impress upon me. I feel that my point was missed, however.

Please think about this, when you say 55+, you are using a huge broad brush. It is overstating the demo. It's like saying 18-34 yo is the SAME as 18+. It's misleading. This is my battle with agencies, and I'm winning. The format IS older adults. But it's NOT Seniors. Do you see what I'm trying to say. The statement is incorrect because it's too inclusive, adding undesired elderly and seniors who are NOT part of the demo.

By the way, we sell to all major beers on another signal. The demo is Men 21-34, not 44 or 49. And the Banks are 1. instate regional, and 2. multi-state 400 branch NE regional.

And after 35 years in this business, I won't argue the 400 song scenario. A consultant buys a list of "Tested" songs done in Minneapolis, and uses the same info to program a station in Fresno. Why does one cycle of programming hammer home a hit by Tommy James, then the next cycle, the same song is pulled because it didn't "test well". Who's wrong, the first audience or the second, or the third, when the song returns? It's voodoo programming. It's nonscence.

I'm not saying there's not a need for program consultants, but there are precious few that really know how to make you a contender.
 
boomers

AMFM, I think you're missing our point.

While 55+ is a broad stroke, it really isn't- it's out of the 25-54 demo, therefore advertisers are not directing agencies to target them. It's that simple, regardless of how broad 55+ is (it's no different than not targeting under 12- nobody in radio does). Call it 55-64 if you like-it's still not on the radar of most advertisers, no matter how much Oldies freaks in radio protest it.

And, you have to get off this obsession with "consultants". You seem to lump "consultants" with research and one doesn't necessarily have an automatic connection with the other. Besides, most radio stations today do not have a "program consultant".
 
amfmsw said:
Please think about this, when you say 55+, you are using a huge broad brush. It is overstating the demo. It's like saying 18-34 yo is the SAME as 18+. It's misleading. This is my battle with agencies, and I'm winning. The format IS older adults. But it's NOT Seniors. Do you see what I'm trying to say. The statement is incorrect because it's too inclusive, adding undesired elderly and seniors who are NOT part of the demo.

However, there are just no signficant buys for any demo over 55. As I said, in LA last year, there were none. It does not matter if it is 44-64 or 55-69 or whatever. Or even 55+. There are just no buys.

By the way, we sell to all major beers on another signal. The demo is Men 21-34, not 44 or 49. And the Banks are 1. instate regional, and 2. multi-state 400 branch NE regional.

Beer demos vary from 21-34 to 21-49 in our experience. Premium brands tend to be 25-44, some go out to 49.

And after 35 years in this business, I won't argue the 400 song scenario. A consultant buys a list of "Tested" songs done in Minneapolis, and uses the same info to program a station in Fresno.

Both of those markets are big enough to do multiple tests, locally, a year, as well as callout and perceptuals. You can't "buy" a test done in another market (unless some PD has a terrible lack of ethnics and sells proprietary data to a friend)... they are not for sale. And companies that use research know that only local or, in some cases of small makets, regionalized, research has any relevance. I do about 80 music tests a year, and I wish there was a way to use the Fresno test in San Jose, but there is not.

Why does one cycle of programming hammer home a hit by Tommy James, then the next cycle, the same song is pulled because it didn't "test well". Who's wrong, the first audience or the second, or the third, when the song returns? It's voodoo programming. It's nonscence.

No, it is called burn. Marginal songs test, you play them, they burn a bit, you stop, you test again after resting, they are again playable. Goes on all the time. Most good PDs will have this kind of song in a rest cycle so the automatically rest after a certain number of plays. This is why I test one adult hits (gold) format 6 times a year!

I'm not saying there's not a need for program consultants, but there are precious few that really know how to make you a contender.

As was just said, very few stations have consultants but those that get the good ones do great. An example would be Bill Tanner's consulting of the Cox Urban and Urban AC stations in Birmingham... they have been #1 and #2 for about a decade save an occasional "intrusion" by some other station. Or the WPRM network in Puerto Rico... #1 for 20 straight years with double the share of the #2 station in every book. Or the country stations consulted by Rusty Walker... added value way beyond the cost of the service.
 
"However, there are just no signficant buys for any demo over 55."

Tell that to Dennis Hopper.

"No, it is called burn. Marginal songs test, you play them, they burn a bit, you stop, you test again after resting, they are again playable."

It's called Lunar Rotation. By NOT burning ANY 30 year old song by playing it daily in different dayparts, TSL goes through the roof. If a song "tests marginally", but is easy to listen to, not abrasive (like some Kinks songs), and not a novelty, it should be left in 365, but play in an optional time window. Would any 45-50 year old woman change the channel when 5th Dimension "Working On A Groovy Thing" plays twice a month with 12 hour seperation? I think not. Oh, but play "Satisfaction" 12 times a week. Are you nuts?

And yes, I agree that some songs are more popular and should be played more often, but not to the point where you hate the song! Don't you read the threads of how listeners are tired of the old fashioned 400 song programming? It's killed us. Oh but wait, I should stop listening then, right? Buy and Ipod. Buy a Sat radio. But wait! I'm 51. I'm too old to change and try new things! I don't switch habits and brands because I'm an oldie listener. In fact, you're reading this on a scribed stone tablet, because I'm too old to grasp new things, like computers. You told me so, so it must be true. I'm leaving now to drink my hemlock.
 
amfmsw said:
"However, there are just no signficant buys for any demo over 55."

Tell that to Dennis Hopper.

I'm not quite sure what that means, but...

As mentioned, I looked at the buys for LA last year (and less formally consulted with folks in about half the top-10 markets in the US) and found that the agency buys for 55+ on radio were so rare that they could be truthfully considered the exceptions that prove the rule.

Agencies advise stations when they are planning a buy so that the stations can present rates. Agencies have a Cost Per Point (CPP) goal in the target demo for each market (A CPP for Houston will be half that of LA, for example, because a point in LA represents twice the listeners of one in Houston, approximately). If a station presents a rate that is competitive against the target, they will be considered. If the station is above the CPP, they can offer bonus spots or merchandising or promotion to "equalize" the CPP and make them competitive.

So, stations are presenting rates based on the delivery in the target demo for the account, not based on 12+ boxcar numbers. And by adjusting rates, they can get the buy if they are agressive.

Local stations in the smaller rated markets or in suburban settings or in unrated markets do mostly local direct selling. In such situations, they have an opportunity to convince an advertiser of the value of older listenership. In the agency setting, demo goals are pretty much set in stone ahead of the buying decisions, so tend to be impossible to change. This is why we have relatively successful oldies and standards operations in smaller markets, but few in the larger ones that depend on agency business for a large part of revenues and, in many cases, for the ability to make a profit.

"No, it is called burn. Marginal songs test, you play them, they burn a bit, you stop, you test again after resting, they are again playable."

It's called Lunar Rotation.

No, it's not. A "lunar rotation" is just a very slow rotating category... one which plays very seldom and which is the lowest tier on the rotation grid. I am talking about what some call "platooning" where some songs are forced to rest for as much as 6 months before, automatically, rejoining a regularly rotated category. For example, a song can rest for many months, then come back and play, for example, twice in each daypart over a two month period, and then go back to rest. I use reach and frequency calculations for this kind of song, but this all changes as the PPM rolls out as the R&F formulae change for the new measurement, just as radio usage changes.

By NOT burning ANY 30 year old song by playing it daily in different dayparts, TSL goes through the roof.

No, it depends on the song... a song with a barely passing score composed of some to either side of neutral will behave very differently from one that is 100% scored as a "favorite" by everyone within one standard deviation. The former is dangerous, the other can be played several times a day quite safely.

If a song "tests marginally", but is easy to listen to, not abrasive (like some Kinks songs), and not a novelty, it should be left in 365, but play in an optional time window.

I have no idea what an optional time window is, but the marginally scoring song has no passion. It does not add per se to TSL, but can be used to create a variety image if used sparingly. Big songs played often create good TSL Stations with "too big" playlists with lots of so-so songs get low TSL, while ones with tighter lists made up of hits get the big TSL. TSL is moved by playing favorites, not by playing tons of different songs.

Remember, the TSL of an oldies station, for example, sits in the 8 hours a week range. The week has 168 hours, or 128 in the 6 AM to Midnight dayparts. A song played three times a day will be heard by the average listener only about once a week if it rotates "perfectly" through dayparts and hours.

Would any 45-50 year old woman change the channel when 5th Dimension "Working On A Groovy Thing" plays twice a month with 12 hour seperation? I think not. Oh, but play "Satisfaction" 12 times a week. Are you nuts?

First, a 12 hour separation creates a harmonic... any rotation of 12, 8, 6 or 4 hours will create identical patterns every day!

Second, it is not about "turning off the radio" but about the listening experience. If the listener does not hear enough favorite songs... ones that elicit an emotional response... they will not "like" the station overall. It's about playing each listener's favorites often enough, and not playing negs enough to drive segments of the listenership away.

And yes, I agree that some songs are more popular and should be played more often, but not to the point where you hate the song! Don't you read the threads of how listeners are tired of the old fashioned 400 song programming?

I don't get my radio advice from threads. I get it from talking to listeners and by analyzing listening in Arbitron and then designing a product that fits the listening span I hope to achieve based on playing the best songs.

It's killed us.

A few listeners are never going to like a format that is intended to serve the average the best way possible. Too long a playlist drives people to iPods, since there they can determine exactly what songs they are going to hear. On the radio, you are trying to satisfy multiple people all at once, and you can not play songs that don't do this.


Oh but wait, I should stop listening then, right?

Probably.

Buy and Ipod. Buy a Sat radio. But wait! I'm 51. I'm too old to change and try new things! I don't switch habits and brands because I'm an oldie listener.

You missed entirely the sales point. Advertisers do not dispute that early boomers and seniors buy things. The issue is that they are hard to sell, and the cost of selling often erases any profit. No ROI.

In fact, you're reading this on a scribed stone tablet, because I'm too old to grasp new things, like computers. You told me so, so it must be true. I'm leaving now to drink my hemlock.

Does that mean you are going to stop posting?

The fact is that there is a big consumer market over 55, but advertisers can not profitably use radio to create consumption of their offerings because they don't make money doing it.




[/quote]
 
well, actually

amfmsw said:
And yes, I agree that some songs are more popular and should be played more often, but not to the point where you hate the song! Don't you read the threads of how listeners are tired of the old fashioned 400 song programming? It's killed us.

AMFM, I would hardly use a bunch of board-ops and radio hacks bitching and whining about playlist size on a radio board as evidence on how real radio listeners feel. It anecdotal, at best.
 
Re: well, actually

Oldies Cat said:
amfmsw said:
And yes, I agree that some songs are more popular and should be played more often, but not to the point where you hate the song! Don't you read the threads of how listeners are tired of the old fashioned 400 song programming? It's killed us.

AMFM, I would hardly use a bunch of board-ops and radio hacks bitching and whining about playlist size on a radio board as evidence on how real radio listeners feel. It anecdotal, at best.
Such complaints are hardly only heard here. Visit other audio boards, other discussion groups that don't even talk about radio, the topic comes up. Do a search on "oldies radio" and "playlists." You will find it.
Newspaper columnists have written about the phenomonom. One in LA on a search I found was forced to endure workers repariring his home listening all day to K-EArth, which couldn't stop playing the same old songs with little variety.
Listen to the listeners.

DavidEduardo said:
amfmsw said:
"However, there are just no signficant buys for any demo over 55."
Tell that to Dennis Hopper.
I'm not quite sure what that means, but...
David, you must not watch TV commercials.
Hopper has been doing a series of commercials on retirment investing for Baby Boomers. You know, that monster group that radio seems blind about.
The song, GIMMER SOME LOVIN', plays behind the words.
 
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