Legends 100.3 West Palm Beach FL (which covers Boca, where apparently a lot of Jewish people live) played "Hanukkah in Santa Monica" by Tom Lehrer. Akk the other songs have been either Christmas songs or something that would be played at Christmas.
Plenty of us in Palm Beach County. Plenty more in Broward, home to Fort Lauderdale and suburbs. Keep in mind who the target audience is for Legends. You really have to be in that demo to have a fighting chance of even knowing who Tom Lehrer is.
Now ask me twenty years from now if that statement still holds up, and I'll probably be dead. But if not, I'd answer no.
Along with “Now get me out of this pine box!”Now ask me twenty years from now if that statement still holds up, and I'll probably be dead. But if not, I'd answer no.
Sandler's comedy was big in the '90s and '00s. His stuff still plays well with Gen X, but that means he's become "Dad's favorite comedian" to much of the current generation. Additionally, "The Hanukkah Song" got much more radio exposure when current than Lehrer's satirical tune got in the '60s. If programmers think they need to throw a bone to non-Christians at Christmastime just to virtue-signal their station's ownership, Sandler is the obvious choice in 2024, and has been since the day it was released.Is this really all that different (but with a different format) than the hundreds of stations that still play Adam Sandler's "Hanukkah Song?"
Props for knowing it won't be bronze or mahogany.Along with “Now get me out of this pine box!”
I will spare everyone the details, but Hanukkah can start as early as the end of November. In 2021, the first candle was lit on the Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend. In 2013, also a year when Thanksgiving Day fell on the Nov 28th, Hanukkah began on that same evening. It's hard to accuse a PD or MD of not understanding this when some of the folks celebrating Hanukkah themselves don't understand how this works.Also, those programmers need to know when Hanukkah falls, because it jumps around the calendar every year. This year, it begins the day AFTER Christmas, Dec. 26 (actually sundown on the 25th), so everyone playing Sandler this holiday radio season will be doing so correctly no matter the date. In other years, Hanukkah can begin in early December, ending a full two weeks -- plus -- before Christmas...
I had a thought while writing that there might have been a Hanukkah with a late November start fairly recently, I should have paused to do a little research at that point. The "Wandering Hanukkah" (and every other Jewish holiday) phenomenon is easily, but partially, explained by the difference between the Hebrew and Gregorian calendars. Anyway, it doesn't take any effort beyond consulting a standard desktop, wall, or online calendar every year to determine when Hanukkah begins and ends. The PD/MD can even believe that the holiday is some sort of "Jewish Christmas" if he/she wants to, just as long as the station's jocks aren't still playing the Sandler song 10 days after the last day while still slipping in a "Happy Hanukkah" to their listeners going into or coming out of the song.I will spare everyone the details, but Hanukkah can start as early as the end of November. In 2021, the first candle was lit on the Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend. In 2013, also a year when Thanksgiving Day fell on the Nov 28th, Hanukkah began on that same evening. It's hard to accuse a PD or MD of not understanding this when some of the folks celebrating Hanukkah themselves don't understand how this works.
Because it floats with the Jewish feast of the Passover. Traditionally, Christ was betrayed by Judas Iscariot at the Passover feast, so usually Easter is a few days after Passover.Now, can one of our Gentile posters tell me why Easter and its kindred observances drift about the weeks of early spring?
Do they, though? That's why I started the thread.Is this really all that different (but with a different format) than the hundreds of stations that still play Adam Sandler's "Hanukkah Song?"
Wasn't he on "Dr. Demento"? I used to live where one of his stations was.You really have to be in that demo to have a fighting chance of even knowing who Tom Lehrer is.
That's the only place I ever heard of him. I listened on the former WRKR in Racine, WI every Sunday night after AT 40. The only other current program I think could play Tom Lehrer (besides what you mentioned) is Anything, Anything with Rich Russo on WXPK.Wasn't he on "Dr. Demento"? I used to live where one of his stations was.
I have heard the song on dozens of stations throughout the country, from AOR stations to CHR stations to Hot AC. Maybe it has tailed off in recent years, but it's definitely been played oftenDo they, though? That's why I started the thread.
Just to be clear, were you referring to Tom Lehrer's song or Adam Sandler's? (I have a hard time imagining an AOR, CHR or Hot AC playing Lehrer to people whose grandparents might have heard it when it was new.)I have heard the song on dozens of stations throughout the country, from AOR stations to CHR stations to Hot AC. Maybe it has tailed off in recent years, but it's definitely been played often
Yep, a week didn't go by without a Tom Lehrer song or two in his 'Funny Five' countdown. But that 'Fish Heads' song always seemed to get played the most, as it was the most requested song ever on his show.Wasn't he on "Dr. Demento"? I used to live where one of his stations was.
Tom Lehrer was regularly played on The Dr. Demento Show, which aired Sunday nights on mostly AOR, and later Classic Rock stations. KUPD in Phoenix was one, as well as KSEG in Sacramento.Just to be clear, were you referring to Tom Lehrer's song or Adam Sandler's? (I have a hard time imagining an AOR, CHR or Hot AC playing Lehrer to people whose grandparents might have heard it when it was new.)