radioman148 said:
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.
Just out of curiosity why did the date change of school opening get you interested in politics?
Because I wanted the same long summer as before. It was Bush I that did it. I made my first satire song about him at 8. I remember it well, I can't say it on here though. Then my Grandfather would watch C-SPAN constantly, and the Houston City Council meetings on Warner Cable. I started off with a distaste for Bush until about 1990 when he signed the ADA into law and the Civil Rights Act of 1991.
If I were 18 at the time, I would have voted for Dukakis. Funny thing is I wanted 4 more years of Ronald Reagan then I first learned about term limits.
At 18, I finally decided the party that I most belonged to: The Libertarian Party long before I heard of Dr. Ron Paul.
Before that even though I listened to Rush as a teenager I favored Clinton but disliked Gore. Until the cigarette taxes, the tobacco lawsuits. HillaryCare came out about 1993. I still have "See I told you So"
I would listened to Magic 105.3 which was Oldies and KISS and KOOL gold at age 9-10. At 10 I moved on to San Antonio's 3 CHR stations and Houston's CHR stations. My favorite was Q-96 for San Antonio and 93Q for Houston.
When 93Q became Rock Hits I started to listen to Club 104 KRBE followed by 97.9 The Box, and Majic 102 Jamz. And flip between KTFM, KSYM, the 4 Oldies stations, and the 3 AC stations. Still have the Trey Ware and Cindy Cassino Morning Drive taped off a Star 93 KSRR off a Scotch Hi Energy/Low Noise Normal Bias Cassette.
I would also listen to Tom Joyner's Morning Show on KSJL on the way to summer school in 1993.
Fast Forward to 1996:
The major issue I had against the Republicans was the censorship of the internet, the over regulation of the internet. And Delores Tucker who wanted to ban Rap music off the radio.
San Antonio where I lived at the time and still do but back in forth from Austin to San Antonio didn't have a commercial radio station playing Rap music (KTFM didn't count then) before 7 PM we had KSJL and before KSJL it was KSYM or DX'ing Houston radio and taping Houston radio which had KBXX, KMJQ and KYOK (for a short while)
I had changes of musical taste shortly thereafter, I began to listen more to Retro and House music KSYM had House Nation and ElectroRhythms but still supported open internet, and freedom of speech. I would DX KISS 98.5 (KHYS) and KRBE a lot from San Antonio. Then when 98.5 The Jam came on I would DX that and listen to more Retro/Old School. KOOL Gold would play 50s music from Chubby Checker, Buddy Holly, Everley Brothers.
I guess I always like the music that goes away on the radio and when I start to dislike it, it becomes popular again like Rap and Hip Hop for example.
On politics I guess I am sort of a Rick Perry a Democrat before being a Republican, except I started to get involved with the Party of Principle.
Now Reversing to 1992,
In speech class we had a poster of Bush I and I had my picture taken with that picture in the background. I don't know where it is, or I still have it.
And now, the 21st Century:
In 2001, I met both the Bushes at work when I worked in the Galleria area of Houston. March 2001 to be exact.
2004 I was one of those Kerry supporters. My father convinced me to vote for Kerry, I voted for Bush in 2004 for the Republican Primary because I promised Bush II, I would vote for him. I sold him Dryer's Rocky Road Ice Cream on a Rice Charge Account he had.
Rice is exempt from ObamaCare FYI.
I kept my promise because I voted for Bush II in the primary.
I voted for Obama in 2008 as a protest vote because I didn't want Hillary Clinton to get the nomination. She bombarded my cell phone with robocalls (I still have a tape full of them)
I was the only person in Bexar County to vote for Jonathan Allen (1) vote total Allen was in the Constitution party. 2001 was my precinct back then, it was an address a friend of mine let me use because I wanted to vote against State Senator Leticia Van De Putte who charged me $2 more per month on my telephone bill with a brand new charge that she helped introduce along with Ron Wilson (D-Houston) source Houston Chronicle June 1998 known as the Texas Universal Service Charge. Al Gore help pioneer the Federal Universal Service Fund 2 years later. Tisk Tisk It's not an Obama Phone it is rather a Wilson-Van De Putte-Clinton-Gore Phone than it is an Obama phone, I sadly missed my chance to educate Neil Boortz about the term Obama Phone.
Still to this day into Oldies, Classic Hits, House, EDM, and Politics. As you can tell by the essay here.