Wait a sec? Wiki is wrong???? WTH???? Kensington's one station at this point. Like I told David, the stats and facts for revenues are not precise either. It's ok and expected. Not every station is going to report accurate revenues, so the picture is always incomplete and/or incorrect. The formula just get's us all estimates and hopefully the margin of error is within reason. No party foul. It just helps that the facts on here be as honest as possible, with respect to privacy, to make sure the discussion is on tract based on proper data.
I appreciate the great discussion on here about gut vs. research. I just did not want to take David's discussion out of context. I know I will not be able to convey this properly on here, but I also think a station that will basically be limited to a few decades of music (vs. a CHR or current Country format that evolves daily with new music) has to sync itself properly with ebbs and flows of a local market along with the research and trends on the national level. For example, back to Hippie in Nashville. The "format" had been out of the market for a few years. There were obviously songs from the format still mixed in on Jack-FM, The Rock @ 105.9 and Mix 92-9. So all those "old songs" were refreshing to hear when Hippie launched. But five years later, Hippie had to cut out lots of the older songs of the 60's and added a FEW songs from the early 80's to stay somewhat "current" but you still have a massive amount of 70s tunes that have been played numerous times all over town (and the world.) That;s where you can take liberties from the "smart gut" to know when to give the Eagles or Elton John songs a brief rest from decades of plays and add in lesser know hit like "Ah Leah" from Donnie Iris, fully knowing someone out there is "upset" and someone out there is "exuberant." Two of the most hated songs are "Disco Duck" and "My Ding a Ling." We could debate that combination for weeks. People are very vocal about those in particular. But, yet as soon as you say "no" to them, you would literally get requests for those very songs! To me, that is where the gut places the song on a playlist, but perhaps hides it out of main day parts for long periods of time. David or BigA mentioned the dreaded death of a radio station by tune out songs. No doubt. But, in a sense, every listener has different death songs, if you will allow. Joe Walsh tunes may drive me crazy, but I love Lobo. David may love Joe Walsh. BigA hates Lobo. LOL. How do you make everyone happy? It's an endless battle. To me, there are some tricks that ease overkilling over played songs. It definitely includes scores of research data. The fine line is the key. I am not sure there is a perfect combination. As noted, with every format, it's not always the format "we" all would prefer to choose, but you have to take all the moving parts and build a solid business model that can withstand being outdated and weathered.