We have to accept that radio does not any longer have the exclusivity in "breaking" new hit songs. Potential listeners to a particular format know what the "best songs" are at any given moment because they do not rely solely on radio to hear them.You said all that, and didn't mention hip hop lyrics one time. Playing the wrong songs or wrong version of songs doesn't translate to hip hop lyrics are causing a decline in urban radio. You're jumping to conclusions, and your assumptions are wrong. If a radio station is not playing the music that their listeners want, that's a programming issue, and the focus should be on researching better music that the audience will actually like.
The way radio "studies" what millennials want via research. The age of the station manager or programmer does not matter; research maps out what listeners want to hear.For the record, I was born in 1989. I grew up in the 90s and early 2000s. I'm in every major demo. I'm not on the outside looking in. I am a P1 urban listener. I'm not an old guy who has to study what millennials want.
I did not say it bottomed out in the roll-out years of the PPM. A decline began in the mid-90's due to new technology, mostly video games, absorbing some of the time 12 to 14 year olds would have spent with radio.Again, radio listening continues to decline in PPM markets. It didn't bottom out in 2008 to 2010. It continues to decline in PPM and every other type of market.
Keep in mind that 2/3 of the population does not have an Amazon device or an equivalent. And those that do must have the additional cost of Amazon Prime to get generic music streaming ; to get a personal playlist you have to add a music service to the Prime service.It's not complicated. If I want to hear Foreigner, I can say, "Alexa, play Foreigner." I don't need to sit through 20 minutes of commercials, the weather (sponsored), the traffic (sponsored), and the top of the hour ID (you guessed it, sponsored) - to hear it.
Let's see that in real statistics.The bottom line, no matter how much older people who grew up with it insist it isn't happening, the internet has killed it - and it's less and less relevant by the minute. It's just not hard to figure that out.
The alternative is, of course, just the traditional "iPod on shuffle" of streaming or the creation of custom playlists via most streaming alternatives. Or music-less podcasts.Furthermore, radio hasn't done ONE thing to up it's game. It's doing the same old thing it's done since the 80's. EXACTLY the same thing. People are bored to tears with it.
Not quite. 20 years ago, you didn't hear everything sponsored. The "Bass Pro Shops 94Q Studio" is a relatively new phenomenon, at least in large markets.Furthermore, radio hasn't done ONE thing to up it's game. It's doing the same old thing it's done since the 80's. EXACTLY the same thing. People are bored to tears with it.
The alternative is, of course, just the traditional "iPod on shuffle" of streaming or the creation of custom playlists via most streaming alternatives. Or music-less podcasts.
You missed my point about cost. Terrestrial radio is free. Youtube is not.Youtube. Easy.
When is the last time you heard radio in a store or at a party?
Furthermore, radio hasn't done ONE thing to up it's game. It's doing the same old thing it's done since the 80's. EXACTLY the same thing. People are bored to tears with it.
You missed my point about cost. Terrestrial radio is free. Youtube is not.
Dude you just won’t admit that you don’t know what you’re talking about. You keep talking about things that have nothing to do with the topic at hand, and refuse to directly answer the question. At this point it is a waste of energy to keep going back and forth with someone who thinks he’s the “smartest person in the room”. Let me know when you’re ready to have a serious conversation. Until then, this conversation is over. ✌️We have to accept that radio does not any longer have the exclusivity in "breaking" new hit songs. Potential listeners to a particular format know what the "best songs" are at any given moment because they do not rely solely on radio to hear them.
So if you are responsible for an Urban or Churban or CHR station, you know that there are valid and confirmed hits that you can not legally play. At the same time, you know that your listeners know about those unplayable songs and that they will reject any effort to sanitize them via editing.
The end result is that FCC licensed radio stations can't play all the hits. For listeners who keep up with the latest songs, that is a bad situation to be in.
The way radio "studies" what millennials want via research. The age of the station manager or programmer does not matter; research maps out what listeners want to hear.
I did not say it bottomed out in the roll-out years of the PPM. A decline began in the mid-90's due to new technology, mostly video games, absorbing some of the time 12 to 14 year olds would have spent with radio.
But, still, the biggest factor in changing the amount of time people of all age groups, genders and ethnicities spend with radio has been the roughly 35% decrease in Time Spent Listening (TSL) and the resultant deficiency in PUR caused by the introduction of the PPM measurement system.
An important sidebar to this issue is that what has replaced over the air radio is the array of paid services. And because they are paid, there is a significant group of people who can not or will not spend money on connectivity and are left with terrestrial radio as their primary audio entertainment source.
Simple statement of the problem: CHR, Churban and Urban can’t play a significant percentage of new and recent hits due to FCC regulations. Those stations have suffered a greater decline in both cume and TSL because partisans of that music can’t hear it on FCC licensed stations.Dude you just won’t admit that you don’t know what you’re talking about. You keep talking about things that have nothing to do with the topic at hand, and refuse to directly answer the question. At this point it is a waste of energy to keep going back and forth with someone who thinks he’s the “smartest person in the room”. Let me know when you’re ready to have a serious conversation. Until then, this conversation is over. ✌️
CHR is going to be a Top 10 format, if not at the moment Top 5 in all markets.Is CHR in danger in the future? I love CHR Pop stations.
Yes, especially if you're the 2nd or 3rd CHR station in a market. CHR definitely won't go away, but weaker stations in the format will be axed.Is CHR in danger in the future? I love CHR Pop stations.
Keep in mind that 2/3 of the population does not have an Amazon device or an equivalent.
The only real future of radio is basically any form of talk. However, it must be done well and it must model itself after a lot of podcast with very few commercials. It's revenue cannot come from commercials from the past. It has to be built in to other technology aside from being on the actual signal.