dbdigital said:On a similar note, this article is a must-read:
http://www.radioandrecords.com/radi...article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003494749
There are certain apologists regularly contributing to this board who will tell you that media consolidation is a good thing, resulting in more, not less formats and that the media conglomerates own relatively few stations compared to the total number of stations in the U.S and, therefore, are being unfairly vilified. The following stats quoted from the above article plainly show those arguments to be half-truths, spin and lies:
•Just fifteen formats make up three-quarters of all commercial programming. Moreover, radio formats with different names can overlap up to 80% in terms of the songs played on them.
I looked at the study at the Future of Music website. It is seriously, gravely flawed.
They list "Rock" as only two format when it is actually modern, alternative, classic rock, AOR, AAA, etc. Each is a separate, easily distinguishable format.
They list "Spanish" as a format. Spanish is a language. There are at least a dozen different Spanish language formats in the USA alone.
They list CHR as a format, and there are churbans, pop CHRs, rhythmic CHRs, alternative leaning CHRs, etc.
The have no categories for gold based AC, AC, hot AC, alternative AC, rhythmic AC, and even separate formats like Jack and such.
The study, done by an employee of the same organization, is interested in proving one thing: that new artists should have a break.
Never had, never will. Radio's job is not to make new artists, not to sell recorded music, not to introduce new genres. It is to give listeners what they want to hear, and to sell ads to support that effort.