michael hagerty said:DavidEduardo said:nmoore6676 said:Let me guess... you are around 60.
David, your comment is out of bounds. from your resume it is obvious that you yourself are not a spring chicken so why you hate people in my age group escapes me.
I do not hate older people. But someone who likes old radio dramas from the 40's is 99.99999% certain to be in their 60's, so that is a truth.
I rarely (if ever) question David's demographic knowledge, but in this case I have to.
To be in your 60s this year, you'd have to be born between 1941 and 1950. I don't know how many 9 year olds were heavy into radio drama in 1950...but the big bulge in 60-somethings comes with the baby boomers from 1946 onward...and they were more likely to listen to Shadoe Stevens than The Shadow.
I'm betting the demographic sweet spot for Old Time Radio is in the 70s, 80s and maybe even older. My mom liked them. She'd have been 88 last week.
Bill Cosby spoke fondly of them in his old comedy routines...he'll be 73 this year. The youngest person I know who's a fan is 72.
I'll be 54 in a couple of weeks. I'd listen as a novelty if nothing else compelling was on...but I'm betting not a lot of people my age did or would. And I'm in the last year of being of any interest to advertisers.
God - Michael - you're really old! ;D. I first heard old radio dramas as a teenager in the mid 1960s (I'm 58). One of the big AM stations played them during the day on the weekends...I want to say KABC, but I could be wrong. My father had always talked about how great they were compared to TV - that you could use your imagination more and conjure up the pictures in your head. Being a first generation TV kid, I was skeptical about that, but I thoroughly enjoyed some of them, while finding others (like The Shadow)) unbelievably corny.
I remember that many of them seemed so inachronistic and "old fashioned" even though many of them were less than 20 years old at the time.
I also liked the CBS Mystery Theatre in the 80s. In the Bay Area, it ran on KSFO, because KCBS didn't want to break their all news format.
RE: George Nicholaw's editorials - no knock on the man, he's a great radio veteran, but I found his editorials stodgy in the 1960s. He must have been a young guy then, but he always sounded like a grumpy old man to me.