Vanlen said:With the demographics of Classic Hits as the years add up now is it possible to include late 50s hits as well or is that another format that I haven't come to grips with. Confusing with Variety Hits, Classic Hits etc.
DavidEduardo said:Vanlen said:With the demographics of Classic Hits as the years add up now is it possible to include late 50s hits as well or is that another format that I haven't come to grips with. Confusing with Variety Hits, Classic Hits etc.
Recognizing that "oldies" and "classic hits" are terms of the trade, and not necessarily reflective of the positioning phrases and statements used for listeners on the air...
Classic Hits is a 70's core CHR hits format with a much smaller, and declining, amount of late 60's stuff and a growing amount of 80's material.
Oldies is a 60's core Top 40 hits format, sometimes with 50's material, and sometimes with some early 70's stuff.
Classic hits appeals to a prime sales age range of 35 to 54. Oldies appeals to a sales pariah demo of 55+.
Vanlen said:Thanks all for your great explanations. It seems that for Classic Hits, as DavidEduardo pointed out more of a terms of the trade, it would sense to add from the 80's category as time marches on rather than my earlier thought of additions from the 50s.
Cheers
TheFonz said:I do believe that listeners interested in '50s music have moved away from commercial radio. We haven't heard '50s in most markets for over 10 years.
DavidEduardo said:Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
DavidEduardo said:DavidEduardo said:Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
As a follow up, I looked at persons 65 and over in Chicago back when WLS was a "True Oldies" station.
The leading two stations were talk, and #3 is all news, followed by classical and smooth jazz. Together, these 5 had a 51 share of all listening in that demo.
WLS's "True Oldies" had a 5 share.
DavidEduardo said:TheFonz said:I do believe that listeners interested in '50s music have moved away from commercial radio. We haven't heard '50s in most markets for over 10 years.
99% of those interested in a steady diet of 50's stuff are in their late 60's and beyond. Since the life expectancy in the US is an average of 78 years, you do the math on how many in that group are even alive.
Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
TheFonz said:No need for math. Just look at the Social Security projections. And you need to re-read my post............I said nothing about age.
DavidEduardo said:DavidEduardo said:Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
As a follow up, I looked at persons 65 and over in Chicago back when WLS was a "True Oldies" station.
The leading two stations were talk, and #3 is all news, followed by classical and smooth jazz. Together, these 5 had a 51 share of all listening in that demo.
TheFonz said:It's curious that you mention "65 and over" in your last couple of posts. I thought that the radio standard for losing interest in listeners was always 55 and over. Maybe radio is learning something. There's no doubt that Talk is saving commercial radio. I hope that you radio guys kneel at the Altar of Rush every day.
DavidEduardo said:And the lack of interest in appealing to 55+ (or, for that matter, 65+) is not a radio issue. It's an advertiser issue among those advertisers who buy through agencies (and tend to be research driven and quite sophisticated in marketing). Those clients, in quite near 100% of all cases, specify a target consumer to their agency which purposely excludes 55+. Radio can not program to a group of listeners that advertisers have no interest in reaching because there will be no available revenue.
JohnJax said:While some overlap is inevitable because radio features music familiar to the most people, it's those occasional wow songs and the music specials that make the biggest difference.
TheFonz said:DavidEduardo said:DavidEduardo said:Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
As a follow up, I looked at persons 65 and over in Chicago back when WLS was a "True Oldies" station.
The leading two stations were talk, and #3 is all news, followed by classical and smooth jazz. Together, these 5 had a 51 share of all listening in that demo.
It's curious that you mention "65 and over" in your last couple of posts. I thought that the radio standard for losing interest in listeners was always 55 and over. Maybe radio is learning something. There's no doubt that Talk is saving commercial radio. I hope that you radio guys kneel at the Altar of Rush every day.
willdav713 said:TheFonz said:DavidEduardo said:DavidEduardo said:Beyond that, a huge percentage of 65+ persons don't listen to oldies of any era... 50's or later. You write as if 100% of people in a certain age group only want Top 40 50's oldies. They don't.
As a follow up, I looked at persons 65 and over in Chicago back when WLS was a "True Oldies" station.
The leading two stations were talk, and #3 is all news, followed by classical and smooth jazz. Together, these 5 had a 51 share of all listening in that demo.
It's curious that you mention "65 and over" in your last couple of posts. I thought that the radio standard for losing interest in listeners was always 55 and over. Maybe radio is learning something. There's no doubt that Talk is saving commercial radio. I hope that you radio guys kneel at the Altar of Rush every day.
I'm 32 and I listen to Rush.
Not every day, just when going to work if my shift begins at 2-pm to usually 10:30 pm
He's on from 11-2 on KLBJ AM 590/99.7 FM. My grandfather was the first one introduce me to the Rush Limbaugh TV show, which I liked better. I have a few tapes from Rush's early days.
I started getting into politics when they moved the first day of school from Labor Day of 1988 to August 28, 1988. I was 8.