oldies76 said:
590buddy I'm kinda surprised (NOT) that we haven't heard from the crusty David Eduardo, he the almighty who says that oldies are dead because no ad agency will use an oldies station. Same person who ate a huge amount of humble pie when they took jack off. (!!!!!!!!!!) Same person who says there's not enought revenue in the 54+ demo. The reponse to this post speaks volumes about these nay sayers. tested songs?? "safe playlist"??
LONG LIVE CBS FM!!!
590buddy ;D ;D
He's knows that more and more stations are trying "untested waters" and are successful in what they're now trying to accomplish; PLEASING THE AUDIENCE and GAINING LISTENERS & eventually INCREASE RATINGS. Having a monstrous specialty like this is what people want to hear. They enjoy hearing their lost favorites and will want the majority of them re-aired in the coming weeks and months. The positive feedbacks this station is presumably receiving far outweighs the negatives.
I think he has resigned to this ongoing issue, an issue that will never die!
Since David hasn't apparently seen this yet, I'll step up to the plate.
Advertisers are still not going after 55 plusers. That has not changed. CBS-FM will not attract many advertisers for 55 plus. No station I know of is actively targeting 55 plus, because there's little or no money in it. David's right on that account. Get it in your heads...that's not what's going on here.
But, the current CBS-FM format is going after 35-54 year olds primarily. And that is a sweet spot for advertisers, especially if you superserve 45-54's.
However, they are doing right by continuing to feature some of the earlier years music. Why? Some, not all, but some of it is timeless and deserves to be played.
Song testing does still work. Some of those early years songs do still test. (That is what some stations still refuse to admit.)
But, a feature is just that...a feature. It's great for the listening that can happen over a holiday weekend. It's not an overall change in the programming. Enjoy it.
And, uh...the station is still doing quite well, ratings-wise, despite what some 50's fanatics predicted when they came back on the air. CBS-FM is now a hybrid "classic hits" station that is programmed with an eye to New York City. Duh!
That's what they should have done all along, instead of "Jack", which basically insulted the intelligence of anyone and everyone who ever listened to CBS-FM.
It ain't rocket science...it's just radio.