He would have called it “Yesterdayland”In other words ... "gee, we miscalculated how popular we thought this would be."
I bet Walt would have vetoed the idea before it could start.
He would have called it “Yesterdayland”In other words ... "gee, we miscalculated how popular we thought this would be."
I bet Walt would have vetoed the idea before it could start.
To be fair RD's budget was tiny compared to other movie, animation, TV broadcast, and theme parks. That's a big reason it was allowed to hang around for so long. That, and a couple of family members who used to be involved in Disney's radio holdings via Shamrock that started RD somewhat protected it with the hope that it might catch on eventually. Once those members left the Board or no longer protected RD, talk of the disposal began.In other words ... "gee, we miscalculated how popular we thought this would be."
I bet Walt would have vetoed the idea before it could start.
When I was in junior high school albums of 50s music were advertised and I liked it and I never stopped liking it.Do kids really like oldies? No. As an example, when I was in high school we had an all school assembly to watch a concert of a 1950s-early 1960s cover band that tried to replicate the 1950s image. Yep the songs piqued my interest and I bought a couple of greatest hits LPs covering the era. In about 2 weeks I was done. Not my music. Novelty worn off.
When I was in junior high school albums of 50s music were advertised and I liked it and I never stopped liking it.
When I was in high school the band did a concert and it wasn't just the classical or marching band type music. They did big band too. The students liked it.
On the other hand, people keep saying what people liked in high school determines what they are listening to now and therefore what radio stations should be playing to reach that audience now.Perhaps this doesn't apply to you, Chimp -- you are marvelously unique -- but it is very common for people's musical tastes to change after high school.
On the other hand, people keep saying what people liked in high school determines what they are listening to now and therefore what radio stations should be playing to reach that audience now.
On the other hand, people keep saying what people liked in high school determines what they are listening to now and therefore what radio stations should be playing to reach that audience now.
These same kids liked "Free Bird" by Lynyrd Skynyrd.
I discovered the music of the 40s, 50s and (softer) 60s later and like it even better now than when I first discovered it.i grew up listening to the 50s 60s and 70s.. and i still like it (im 40, its what my parents played on the radio)
but that stuff is just.. old sounding now..... im a fan of 70s 80s oldies and 80s 90s country now
I discovered the music of the 40s, 50s and (softer) 60s later and like it even better now than when I first discovered it.
Good observation. Some of us still love the music of our teen years, others of us continue to listen to... and adopt as ours... music of the next generation or generations of out lives.i grew up listening to the 50s 60s and 70s.. and i still like it (im 40, its what my parents played on the radio)
but that stuff is just.. old sounding now..... im a fan of 70s 80s oldies and 80s 90s country now
marvelously unique and an outlier is an understatement for vchimp, but i mean that in a nice way. he thinks because he likes it others will.. not always trueAs I said, Chimp, you are marvelously unique. But that distinction also means you are what David E. calls an "outlier" and not anyone to base a format on the tastes of.
Good observation. Some of us still love the music of our teen years, others of us continue to listen to... and adopt as ours... music of the next generation or generations of out lives.
Like you, I love 70's and 80's oldies and those 80's and 90's country songs. And in my case, add in a dose of Cumbia, Salsa, Ranchera and other things I picked up in my Latin American odyssey.
As a pre-teen I listened to rock ´n´ roll and DJs like Alan Freed, Pete "Mad Daddy" Myers, Joe Finan and others that sprang out of Cleveland. But I was also a DXer and learned to like a variety of "stuff" ranging from country to Latin American genres. And then I started part-timing at an AM/FM that was R&B and Jazz and got very involved with both. And while doing homework, I'd listen to a very early Beautiful Music station, WDBN or tapes I had made of HJED's trucker overnight show.
A discovery that I would apply later in my radio career: I liked lots of kinds of music and I picked different ones to listen to depending on my mood. And if I bought records, it was on impulse; imagine a 12-year-old in a record store humming a bit of a movement from Swan Lake to see if he could buy the album! And a week or two later, I'd be picking up the latest Buddy Holly song. Mood, not age nor gender or whatever.
Part way through high school, I became so obsessed with radio that I dropped out of the formal education process that bored me beyond belief and interned at a station group that had five stations and each had a different all-music format. I realized that the owners were not programming for themselves but for different people in different moods. The high school drop-out had figured out format radio all by himself.
So, I thought, it must be that you have to find out what different "kinds" of people like and deliver, to their liking and not mine, the best group of songs. Gee, now I was qualified to be a program director.
What I would learn over the next decade or so was that people stop liking songs, too. K.M. has mentioned that listening to old 80's AT 40 editions he does not even remember all the songs. And, I'm sure, some of the ones he remembers he would just as soon forget. People's tastes don't fully change but they go through a slow metamorphosis; not a rapid, overnight Kafka style change, but an evolutionary one.
So, SRG, we both had different backgrounds but, still, they brought us to our rather similar musical preferences today!
Often perceived "outliers" become a significant group.marvelously unique and an outlier is an understatement for vchimp, but i mean that in a nice way. he thinks because he likes it others will.. not always true
So don't discount outliers.
I refuse to pay retail for them!
There is an outlet center for them in South Carolina, I am told. "Savings Simian" I think it is called.Here? We can get them for you wholesale.
There is an outlet center for them in South Carolina, I am told. "Savings Simian" I think it is called.
Everyone goes bananas for their prices!There is an outlet center for them in South Carolina, I am told. "Savings Simian" I think it is called.
Speaking of Emmis Communications and outlier tastes blowing up big, do you know Emmanuel Coquia, KPWR's PD? Tell him there's an outlier here who thinks KPWR HD3 should be a faithful 24/7 recreation of Power 106's 1986-1991 era, complete with all the imaging in the same way KROQ HD2 is a faithful 24/7 recreation of its former, '80s self. I would absolutely love to see that come to pass and in fact have been wondering since the dawn of KROQ HD2 why it hasn't! There has to be an audience out there at least as large as KROQ HD2's who would go ape for this.Often perceived "outliers" become a significant group. My experience with Emmis [...] Research showed a big passion for the music. The "experts" said that the songs would be fun to hear once or twice, but not permanently. The station debuted with the largest share of any FM ever.