I am a mere listener, not a professional. I do listen to OTA every day, Saturday and Sundays included. My listening as a boomer is heavily skewed to spoken word, although there is some music here and there. So, knowing those facts, you'll understand some of my posts are going to be biased. Listening after morning drive, I just don't hear much that is going to cause me to keep my dial glued. If the program is OK I'll stick, but I am just as likely to go to talk radio. But at least I am still listening to OTA. I think the younger set is off to the web or their personal music collections and that's the problem that needs to get addressed. I don't think you can fix it with more or better researched music. Maybe it is because I am outside looking in, but am I seeing something professionals don't want to contemplate? Especially when musicradio has worked so well for such a long time.
Big A suggests new programming is being done - but I don't hear it anywhere. Latest new format I have heard is 'Podcast Radio,' but I just don't think that long form programming is paced well for radio. Would it be better to do the Podcast is smaller chunks, same time every day over the course of a week?
David Eduardo points out that new programming needs to evolve, not just 'appear,' but most of the rest of the comment centers on music evolution. If the kids are not listening to music OTA, doesn't that mean that something other than music is needed to get them to stay with OTA? I am focused on OTA because I think that is where advertisers pay the most money. If I am wrong on this, you can ascribe that to amateur ignorance. If I had a decent powered FM, I would think a talk program following the morning show might keep the dial where it is at, maybe using the sidekicks of the morning show to be the hosts, the topic being whatever was the main idea of the morning show. For the noon time show, maybe some kind of remote based electric lunch spinning in-person requests? Early afternoon, maybe some kind of sponsored comedy show(s)? Later afternoon, maybe some kind of 'are you smarter than a tenth grader' quiz competition? Jeopardy is, I think, one of the highest rated syndicated TV shows - would they be interested in working with radio to find TV worthy contestants? Afternoon Drive, Music, News and Traffic. Evenings and overnight, music with an involved DJ - maybe remotes at interested clubs on Friday and Saturday. For those who say this scenario is not possible - they'll tune out once the music stops - the numbers are showing, I think, that they ARE tuning out now even with a solid music presentation. Comments I saw in these forums are that ratings points hold fewer listeners, and as has been acknowledged, they are listening less. If what I am suggesting is too much, maybe the evolution will need to be slower. I recall a program director's reported instruction on one of these forums some time back - "Be entertaining. If necessary, play a record."
Signal Geek commented that 610 KFRC tried a quiz show format 'many decades ago.' That could have been a fading AM trying anything to stay afloat. And was it a 'format' - quiz shows all day long? Too much of anything (all-stand-up 'comedy radio') is not going to succeed. In any event, just because something failed a long time ago, doesn't mean it shouldn't/couldn't be considered again. One post above was from a guy who did Pub Trivia and how it didn't get the younger set. He would know what kind of quiz doesn't work, but maybe he would know what could be adjusted to make it get the demographic needed.
Big A suggests new programming is being done - but I don't hear it anywhere. Latest new format I have heard is 'Podcast Radio,' but I just don't think that long form programming is paced well for radio. Would it be better to do the Podcast is smaller chunks, same time every day over the course of a week?
David Eduardo points out that new programming needs to evolve, not just 'appear,' but most of the rest of the comment centers on music evolution. If the kids are not listening to music OTA, doesn't that mean that something other than music is needed to get them to stay with OTA? I am focused on OTA because I think that is where advertisers pay the most money. If I am wrong on this, you can ascribe that to amateur ignorance. If I had a decent powered FM, I would think a talk program following the morning show might keep the dial where it is at, maybe using the sidekicks of the morning show to be the hosts, the topic being whatever was the main idea of the morning show. For the noon time show, maybe some kind of remote based electric lunch spinning in-person requests? Early afternoon, maybe some kind of sponsored comedy show(s)? Later afternoon, maybe some kind of 'are you smarter than a tenth grader' quiz competition? Jeopardy is, I think, one of the highest rated syndicated TV shows - would they be interested in working with radio to find TV worthy contestants? Afternoon Drive, Music, News and Traffic. Evenings and overnight, music with an involved DJ - maybe remotes at interested clubs on Friday and Saturday. For those who say this scenario is not possible - they'll tune out once the music stops - the numbers are showing, I think, that they ARE tuning out now even with a solid music presentation. Comments I saw in these forums are that ratings points hold fewer listeners, and as has been acknowledged, they are listening less. If what I am suggesting is too much, maybe the evolution will need to be slower. I recall a program director's reported instruction on one of these forums some time back - "Be entertaining. If necessary, play a record."
Signal Geek commented that 610 KFRC tried a quiz show format 'many decades ago.' That could have been a fading AM trying anything to stay afloat. And was it a 'format' - quiz shows all day long? Too much of anything (all-stand-up 'comedy radio') is not going to succeed. In any event, just because something failed a long time ago, doesn't mean it shouldn't/couldn't be considered again. One post above was from a guy who did Pub Trivia and how it didn't get the younger set. He would know what kind of quiz doesn't work, but maybe he would know what could be adjusted to make it get the demographic needed.