nfladxer said:I know music testing has been the rule for major stations for many years now, but it seems like after the "auditorium" tests became popular, radio became more antiseptic! Could there be any connection?
There is certainly an element of truth here. But most of the "lack of the outlandish" in radio comes from vastly more sophisticated ratings methods (not just the PPM but all the incremental improvements in the diary), legal restrictions, liability issues, etc.
In the 50's and 60's, Top 40 was to a great extent based on sales of singles and juke box play. To buy a record or play it with your nickel or dime meant you had passion for a song... so programming was based on passion. When the single died, and the jukebox faded, radio had to find a way of determining what songs were the best. At the same time, radio started developing formats that played relatively contemporary music mixed with gold or all gold where knowing which older songs were still valid was important.
I saw callout in the 70's... and various forms of music tests, so this is not at all new.
What has changed is the variety of formats that came up with the growth of FM and then the addition of lots more stations to the FM band. That meant having better music than competitors and playing shorter lists of new music and more focused gold lists.
Whatever happened to a PD listening with their ears. An experienced PD should have the sound of the station in his/her head!
I'll give an example. When I did my first test, in the late 70's, I was programming an AC in a top 15 market. The station was #1 in 18-49 women and second overall. I decided to score about 100 songs from the test myself, to see how accurate I was. I found that I was more than 30% off on a quarter of the songs. I thought some hits were stiffs, and some songs I thought were great were full of stiffiness. It proved to me that a good PD... and I had ratings to prove I was at least better than the rest... needs tools that show what listeners like and dislike because a PD can't have street feel 100% of the time when he or she sits most of the day in a radio station.