S
StemCell
Guest
I just hope its the Sunny approach and not the B101 and JBR stale safe direction. NOW should not signify Todays Christmas music, which does not sound as good as the former Sunny Standards and older tunes.
Rockin Rob said:I am with Homer Jay on this one, gradually mix in the Christmas music (Thanksgiving starts with adding at least one title per hour, ramp up the number each week until you hit 4 per hour - outside of the "Black Friday All Request Lunch Brunch", where you would play All Christmas by request to really get the shoppers in the mood) until Christmas Eve at 6AM, then go wall to wall (maybe even "commercial free") until 12/26 at Midnight.
Great formula, which was to me what made Christmas eve/day special growing up...things like the "36 hours of Christmas special" (or variations thereof) on the various stations. Sometimes it was with no live personalities, sometimes with them (I remember WIP's Bill Webber on the air one Christmas asking people to call in and talk about their favorite presents, intermixed with the holiday tunes...which being a radio geek kid, I did). And there were some fun variations on how to build up to the all-holiday specials, like Kiss 100's "Christmas Kisses"--15 minute blocks of holiday tunes woven in here and there.
Before the two months of holiday songs craze reached our city, I remember leaving a Y100 Thanksgiving-eve event at whatever ungodly hour it was on Thanksgiving morning and hearing of all things, Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer, and thinking "let the joy begin," knowing I wouldn't overdose on it before sitting down to have some turkey.
Soon Yi CIV.V said:These "radio memories" messages are some of my favorite posts on these boards. Probably second only to the ones where people make up completely illogical lies about format changes!
Soon Yi CIV.V said:How about McGuinn accepting an extremely lucrative offer from Radio One to bring Y100 back to get a chunk of Radio 104.5's audience. This of course, starts a chain reaction during which Clear Channel panics and starts playing "Here Comes The Sun" over and over on 104.5 before kicking off 90 days of Sunny Christmas music. Come January, their plans to return to Soft AC are dashed after Now 97.5 starts playing Neil Diamond, Barry Manilow, and Barbra Streisand at 11:30 p.m. on December 31. Not knowing what else to do, Clear Channel plays nothing but commercial-free Irish music until St. Patrick's Day, when they relaunch Rumba 104.5. Manny Rodriguez is the general manager of a small-market Radio One cluster before Christmas 2009 rolls around.
imhomerjay said:That's not a rumor. I have it on authority from the sister of a cousin to a roommate's ex-boyfriend's stepfather's parole officer who ran into the plant watering service guy from the Radio One office that it's a done deal that McGuinn is coming back.