I doubt this would ever happen again, but what I’d nominate as the best counter-programming move ever was done by the old WFIL in Philadelphia every Christmas day for a handful of years – it played NO Christmas music whatsoever that day. It was just like a normal day -- normal jocks, normal CHR (“Top 40” in those days) playlist, normal jingles, etc. Just like a day in September. I remember it doing that in the early ‘70s, though the last year I remember it happening was 1974. I listened most of the day those Christmases it did that. By Christmas Day, you’re all “Christmased out,” so to hear “normal hit radio” was welcomed to me – and I assume to many other people as well. All these years later, I look back on it and think it was a brilliant move. There were no PPMs or anything like that back then, but I’d bet FIL had thousands pf people listening Christmas day who may not have usually listened other days. But again, I doubt you could do it today. First of all, everyone expects Christmas off; you’d probably have a very hard time getting your normal staff to agree to work. Secondly, your sales department has already sold the block “All Christmas Music” programming every station does today. And maybe listener response would be different today. But at least between 1970 and 1974, it worked quite well for Famous 56.