Since those in charge of our local stations and their superiors generally don't want to hear about this, YOU get to!
"For people who don't like radio" is the message related to my proposed format that I hope will someday be seen in print advertisements and on billboards. The only other information below those six words will be the letters of the station that opts for this format, its frequency, and its website address, all in the lower left corner. If the station has a limited signal, then we will only use billboards in areas where it can be clearly heard. I think it's fair to assume that 100% of the motorists who drive by one of them will immediately reach down and check us out, regardless of whether they like radio or not. They won't be able to resist, as their curiousity won't let them!
"Yesterday's Top Secrets" is what we will be all about. We will only play great rock and roll music from the past that has been ignored by all of the other stations in this market. We will proudly and refreshingly offer A-sides that people aren't sick and tired of hearing, along with album cuts and B-sides. Each week we will shine a special spotlight on two artists who will receive a bit more airplay than everyone else during the week that they're saluted. I have eighty-eight Featured Artist pairings put together, and here are thirty of them:
The Animals + Adam and the Ants
The Beach Boys + Blondie
The Beatles + Buzzcocks
Bob Dylan + The B-52's
Carole King + The Clash
Cream + The Cure
Creedence Clearwater Revival + The Cramps
The Doors + The Damned
Electric Light Orchestra + Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD)
Gary Lewis and the Playboys + Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Gerry and the Pacemakers + Echo and the Bunnymen
The Hollies + The Pixies
Jan and Dean + Devo
Jefferson Airplane + Joy Division
The Jimi Hendrix Experience + The Jam
Lesley Gore + Gang of Four
The Monkees + Modern English
Petula Clark + The Pretenders
Pink Floyd + The Psychedelic Furs
The Rascals + R.E.M.
The Rolling Stones + The Ramones
The Searchers + Squeeze
Sly and the Family Stone + Sex Pistols
Spanky and Our Gang + Siouxsie and the Banshees
Steely Dan + The Smiths
Steppenwolf + The Stranglers
The Supremes + Simple Minds
T. Rex + X
The Turtles + Talking Heads
The Yardbirds + U2
Rather catchy combinations, don't you think? And the other fifty-eight are just as interesting!
I would like to host a four-hour show, from 6:00 to 10:00 each weekday morning. It will then be immediately rebroadcast a total of five times, covering the twenty hours until the next new one begins. On Saturdays and Sundays, we will again re-air the Monday-through-Friday shows of the previous five days. The advantages of six consecutive broadcasts of the same show on each weekday include the following:
1) Many listeners will enjoy the songs so much that they'll find they can't wait to hear them again -- and they won't have to!
2) Listeners who can't tune in for four hours straight will be able to later hear on that same day or night what they missed, by easily calculating when the music of their missing one or two or three hours will resurface.
3) A tremendous amount of word-of-mouth advertising will be generated by this approach, as radio listeners understandably will be much more likely to recommend a station to others if they know ahead of time EXACTLY what bands and songs their friends will be hearing on it, later that same day or night. The risk of possible embarrassment to the word-spreader will be eliminated!
4) The repeated broadcasts will save the owner of the station much money, as deejay salaries will be greatly reduced and no syndicated programming will need to be purchased.
The gaps during certain time slots resulting from advertising volume disparity and the nighttime absence of news, weather, and traffic reports will be filled with entertaining tidbits, such as the reading of selected excerpts from the 100+ issues of my 1980's music fanzine and the having of fun with questions, comments, criticisms, etc. that are e-mailed or phoned in to us.
It's true that with the rebroadcasts, there will be the concept of song repetition that so many of us despise. However, on the station for people who don't like radio (and for a lot of people who do!), the repeated songs will not be the same ones that are currently being played over and over again by everyone else, and once ours have been aired for a total of six times within a 24-hour period, they won't be heard again for at least two months (not counting the Saturday/Sunday rebroadcasts of shows). Our song library will include thousands of titles, and during the course of their first few weeks of listening to us, euphoric Central Ohio music fans will find themselves in a state of shocked disbelief at the number of different songs by some of their favorite artists that they will have heard! And that's one of the big reasons why once it's introduced, "Yesterday's Top Secrets" will quickly become synonymous with fun radio, adventure radio, and revolutionary radio -- terms that will not just be mere marketing cliches, but rather earth-shattering and industry-shattering truths.
"You say you want a revolution? Well, it all starts right here right now -- revolutionary music on revolutionary radio, "Yesterday's Top Secrets" on Wxxx. Songs from the Sixties, and later music that's filled with the fun and the freedom of the Sixties. Oldies that aren't old, because they haven't been played to death, classic rock that's in a class by itself, and alternative music that was simply a pleasant alternative to all of the disco that surrounded it when it first came out! "Yesterday's Top Secrets" on Wxxx, featuring not the best-known music of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but rather some of the best."
"For people who don't like radio" is the message related to my proposed format that I hope will someday be seen in print advertisements and on billboards. The only other information below those six words will be the letters of the station that opts for this format, its frequency, and its website address, all in the lower left corner. If the station has a limited signal, then we will only use billboards in areas where it can be clearly heard. I think it's fair to assume that 100% of the motorists who drive by one of them will immediately reach down and check us out, regardless of whether they like radio or not. They won't be able to resist, as their curiousity won't let them!
"Yesterday's Top Secrets" is what we will be all about. We will only play great rock and roll music from the past that has been ignored by all of the other stations in this market. We will proudly and refreshingly offer A-sides that people aren't sick and tired of hearing, along with album cuts and B-sides. Each week we will shine a special spotlight on two artists who will receive a bit more airplay than everyone else during the week that they're saluted. I have eighty-eight Featured Artist pairings put together, and here are thirty of them:
The Animals + Adam and the Ants
The Beach Boys + Blondie
The Beatles + Buzzcocks
Bob Dylan + The B-52's
Carole King + The Clash
Cream + The Cure
Creedence Clearwater Revival + The Cramps
The Doors + The Damned
Electric Light Orchestra + Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD)
Gary Lewis and the Playboys + Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Gerry and the Pacemakers + Echo and the Bunnymen
The Hollies + The Pixies
Jan and Dean + Devo
Jefferson Airplane + Joy Division
The Jimi Hendrix Experience + The Jam
Lesley Gore + Gang of Four
The Monkees + Modern English
Petula Clark + The Pretenders
Pink Floyd + The Psychedelic Furs
The Rascals + R.E.M.
The Rolling Stones + The Ramones
The Searchers + Squeeze
Sly and the Family Stone + Sex Pistols
Spanky and Our Gang + Siouxsie and the Banshees
Steely Dan + The Smiths
Steppenwolf + The Stranglers
The Supremes + Simple Minds
T. Rex + X
The Turtles + Talking Heads
The Yardbirds + U2
Rather catchy combinations, don't you think? And the other fifty-eight are just as interesting!
I would like to host a four-hour show, from 6:00 to 10:00 each weekday morning. It will then be immediately rebroadcast a total of five times, covering the twenty hours until the next new one begins. On Saturdays and Sundays, we will again re-air the Monday-through-Friday shows of the previous five days. The advantages of six consecutive broadcasts of the same show on each weekday include the following:
1) Many listeners will enjoy the songs so much that they'll find they can't wait to hear them again -- and they won't have to!
2) Listeners who can't tune in for four hours straight will be able to later hear on that same day or night what they missed, by easily calculating when the music of their missing one or two or three hours will resurface.
3) A tremendous amount of word-of-mouth advertising will be generated by this approach, as radio listeners understandably will be much more likely to recommend a station to others if they know ahead of time EXACTLY what bands and songs their friends will be hearing on it, later that same day or night. The risk of possible embarrassment to the word-spreader will be eliminated!
4) The repeated broadcasts will save the owner of the station much money, as deejay salaries will be greatly reduced and no syndicated programming will need to be purchased.
The gaps during certain time slots resulting from advertising volume disparity and the nighttime absence of news, weather, and traffic reports will be filled with entertaining tidbits, such as the reading of selected excerpts from the 100+ issues of my 1980's music fanzine and the having of fun with questions, comments, criticisms, etc. that are e-mailed or phoned in to us.
It's true that with the rebroadcasts, there will be the concept of song repetition that so many of us despise. However, on the station for people who don't like radio (and for a lot of people who do!), the repeated songs will not be the same ones that are currently being played over and over again by everyone else, and once ours have been aired for a total of six times within a 24-hour period, they won't be heard again for at least two months (not counting the Saturday/Sunday rebroadcasts of shows). Our song library will include thousands of titles, and during the course of their first few weeks of listening to us, euphoric Central Ohio music fans will find themselves in a state of shocked disbelief at the number of different songs by some of their favorite artists that they will have heard! And that's one of the big reasons why once it's introduced, "Yesterday's Top Secrets" will quickly become synonymous with fun radio, adventure radio, and revolutionary radio -- terms that will not just be mere marketing cliches, but rather earth-shattering and industry-shattering truths.
"You say you want a revolution? Well, it all starts right here right now -- revolutionary music on revolutionary radio, "Yesterday's Top Secrets" on Wxxx. Songs from the Sixties, and later music that's filled with the fun and the freedom of the Sixties. Oldies that aren't old, because they haven't been played to death, classic rock that's in a class by itself, and alternative music that was simply a pleasant alternative to all of the disco that surrounded it when it first came out! "Yesterday's Top Secrets" on Wxxx, featuring not the best-known music of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but rather some of the best."