NHRadio said:I also work at a New England CHR. Young people do listen, but 12-18? Much closer to 12 than 18.
reelyreal said:Every time I hear the "young people don't listen to the radio" statement, I want to invite all of you into the studio of my CHR here in New England, and work my phones for a shift.
Trust me, young people still listen to CHR. I'm talking 12-18 and beyond.
faderraider said:I gave it two hours yesterday, listened while driving. I won't be doing that again.
faderraider said:I gave it two hours yesterday, listened while driving. I won't be doing that again.
Norm Rosen said:At first listen, AMP 103.3 plays the same bad songs every two hours
WNTIRadio said:Does anyone ever need to hear Season's in the Sun, Muskrat Love, Henry the VIII, MacArthur Park or Feelings ever again???
Let's see, that's a syndicated show devoted to playing songs that either stiffed or don't test well, a one-man radio station, an off-hours filler format, and an HD2 stream. Yup, that's proof those songs remain popular. Surrrre.Eli Polonsky said:WNTIRadio said:Does anyone ever need to hear Season's in the Sun, Muskrat Love, Henry the VIII, MacArthur Park or Feelings ever again???
I believe "Seasons In The Sun" (Terry Jacks' hit version) is one of the most requested songs on Barry Scott's "Lost 45's" show.
"Muskrat Love", "MacArthur Park", and "Feelings" are all in rotation on WJIB.
"Henry the VIII" is in rotation on the "Beatles and Before" automated oldies format late nights and weekends on WCAP Lowell (whenever they don't have talk or local sports on).
Also, "Seasons In The Sun", "Muskrat Love" and "Feelings" are in rotation on the WROR HD2 "Nothing But The '70s" channel.
WNTIRadio said:Sometimes the rotations were tighter than every two hours on the 60's Top 40 stations. Look at an old WABC rotation as an example.
I like a lot of the "old CHR" from the 60's... but for every great Beatles, Stones or Simon and Garfunkel song there were 5 tunes that sucked... Bobby Goldsboro, 1910 Fruitgum Company, 50 different girl groups that all sounded the same...
You can't tell me that "I Like Bread and Butter" is any more or less mindless than "I'm Sexy and I Know It". There are a lot of top 40 songs from the 60's-70's era that have been thankfully forgotten. Does anyone ever need to hear Season's in the Sun, Muskrat Love, Henry the VIII, MacArthur Park or Feelings ever again??? All were huge hits. All were bad songs. So this whole "crappy music is all young kids listen to" argument is as old as top 40 radio itself.
There will be a lot of songs from today that will fall through the cracks of time too.
I will admit that I'm not a huge top 40 fan, but once in awhile there's a catchy song out there... Carly Rae Jepsen, Lady GaGa's first couple of hits, LMFAO just to name a few.
promixcuous said:Listening to AMP, their playlist is very good...consistently quality energetic pop material without much of anything horribly cheesy (save LMFAO). What is missing from AMP are tomorrow's particularly strong songs; the hair-tinglingly memorable songs that make you turn around in this era are somewhat few, other than tracks like "Bad Romance" and "Pokerface" and "We Are Young". <snip> Can anyone point to a memorable song on AMP?
Jacko said:If 103.3 Amp also employed a multi-modal "live and local" slant, including texting requests, prizes, promotions, and other ways to show listeners that their jocks are actually there--as opposed to "talent" fed in from out of town--I think Amp has a good shot against Kiss and maybe Jam'n. But that's only if they promote the hell out of it.
Another thing not mentioned, could a reason why CBS picked 103.3 WODS to flip be because the Amp format would directly be targeted toward the kids of the WODS listeners? For example, mom and 17-year-old kid get into the minivan, and when mom turns on the car, instead of KC & the Sunshine Band, 103.3 is playing Nicki Minaj, grabbing the 17-year-olds attention.
Yeah, it's a stretch...
Jacko
Jacko said:Another thing not mentioned, could a reason why CBS picked 103.3 WODS to flip be because the Amp format would directly be targeted toward the kids of the WODS listeners?
Joseph_Gallant said:I wouldn't be surprised if 103.3 (where I expect new call letters soon) will remain automated for the long term.
It is possible, with the right jingles and imaging, to do a hi9gh-energy Top-40 format without DJ's.
Besides, with young people (the target audience for the new format) using I-Pod's and MP-3's a lot, having personality DJ's for a young-skewing Top-40 format may actually be a detriment.
Call letters don't matter in the PPM era. No need to change them. The oldies station in Gloucester, after all, is still WBOQ (W-Bach, remember?), two format changes after it last played classical music. The call is mentioned at the top of the hour only, otherwise the station is North Shore 104.9.kenwood101 said:Joseph_Gallant said:I wouldn't be surprised if 103.3 (where I expect new call letters soon) will remain automated for the long term.
It is possible, with the right jingles and imaging, to do a hi9gh-energy Top-40 format without DJ's.
Besides, with young people (the target audience for the new format) using I-Pod's and MP-3's a lot, having personality DJ's for a young-skewing Top-40 format may actually be a detriment.
I don't know about new calls.The calls are all over on the HD-2 in jingles etc.