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How long should a station use the slogan ‘The New’

Just curious as I’ve always wondered how long do you think, say for example a new CHR, should use ‘The New’ in the slogan? 6 months? A year? 18 months? It would seem to me if you’ve used it for more than a year or two it’s not accurate as it really isn’t a new station anymore? But just my opinion.
 
WKTU in NYC called themselves "The New KTU" for many many years.

There had been a prevous WKTU in the market in the 1970s and 8s, but that was 10+ years before the current WKTU hit the airwaves.
 
As long as it wants. Some have been "The New" for 20 years.
And, after about a decade, KSCA in LA went back this month to La Nueva. First used in 1998.
 
In Fresno KSKS has been "The New Kiss Country" for 30+ years. From day one, to my ears, KSKS has always meant K-SucKS.
 
We just forgot to name the decades of 2001-2010 and 2011-2020. I don't know how much the "aughts" ever caught on.
It never did. I wish someone had asked what people who were alive in the 1900s called that decade, because calling our most recent "00" decade anything seems to have eluded just about everyone who lived through it. I suppose the '10s could be called "the Teens" even though 10, 11 and 12 (or just 11 and 12, if you're one of those "there was no year zero" decade sticklers) don't have "teen" in them.
 
It never did. I wish someone had asked what people who were alive in the 1900s called that decade, because calling our most recent "00" decade anything seems to have eluded just about everyone who lived through it. I suppose the '10s could be called "the Teens" even though 10, 11 and 12 (or just 11 and 12, if you're one of those "there was no year zero" decade sticklers) don't have "teen" in them.
Absolute Radio UK has dedicated digital radio stations for each decade from the 1960s to the 2020s, and they call their 00s and 10s stations "noughties" and "tens" respectively. In more formal contexts, like the news, you'll tend to hear "the two-thousands" and "the twenty-tens" - for instance, references to "the late two-thousands recession".

As for "new" stations, I always figured that if it was a CHR format (which is where I've always tended to hear it most) a station calling itself "the new" referred to the music being played, rather than the format itself.
 
By ‘The New’ I was referring to a station that had recently launched or flipped. Or a tweaked version of the station that had shifted its format.
 
And now that we're in to the fourth year of the 2020s, I have yet to hear a single person refer to this as "the 20s." Maybe humanity got out of the habit of labeling decades. After all, everything after 1999 seems to be bunched together in some kind of a blur.
 
And now that we're in to the fourth year of the 2020s, I have yet to hear a single person refer to this as "the 20s." Maybe humanity got out of the habit of labeling decades. After all, everything after 1999 seems to be bunched together in some kind of a blur.
We had the "Roaring 20s" but that was only named after the fact.
 
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