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Interesting happenings at Star 94 / "Big '90s Weekend"

C

Craziaskowboi

Guest
So apparently Star 94 is about to be bought by Entercom, and there have been some big changes recently. The first big change was the new morning show, but another big change that's happened this month is that the "Big '90s Weekend" has become a regular occurrence. This is the third weekend in a row that Star 94 has hosted a Big '90s Weekend, so apparently they're not reserving it just for holiday weekends anymore. I've also noticed that they've expanded the '90s playlist somewhat, and they've even begun asking listeners for input. I'm actually about to send the music director an e-mail with several ideas for songs to add, primarily from the first half of the '90s, because they're still a bit heavy on the second half of the decade.

Regardless of Star 94's situation in the last couple of years, I do believe that the Big '90s Weekend is a good concept, and such a show could become something special if executed well. Last summer I did lament that their '90s playlist was too narrow for a weekend-long specialty show, but I listened anyway because I grew up in the '90s, so those are "my" songs, and I still believe that the '90s are underrepresented on the radio. With that said, the expanded '90s playlist is a step in the right direction, and hopefully they're open to expanding it even more. Ideally, the Big '90s Weekend would cover pretty much everything except hard-core rap and the heaviest alternative rock. In terms of straight pop music, keep playing the boy/girl bands and the big dance/techno hits. In terms of rock, keep playing the post-grunge and "adult" alternative, and add more grunge standards that aren't too heavy (think "Jeremy" by Pearl Jam). In terms of hip-hop and R&B, nothing "gangsta" (though "Gangsta's Paradise" might work), and nothing excessively sexual. Keep it fun. The uptempo "new jack swing" and "Miami bass" sounds are perfect.

Anyway, it'll be interesting to see if the new morning show and expansion of the Big '90s franchise will help. I suppose it depends on how patient Entercom is. If they have a long-term focus, then there's potential. They seem to know what they're doing, because some of my favorite radio stations in the U.S. are owned by Entercom. In fact, I've been streaming 98.9 The Rock (KQRC, Kansas City) on a regular basis ever since Clear Channel killed Project 9-6-1, and if they can make the Active Rock format work that well during a "down" period in popularity, then they must be doing something right. I'd hate to see another heritage station in Atlanta bite the dust, especially since they're the only station that gives the '90s more than lip service. Time will tell, but I like some of the recent changes they've made, and I hope they work.
 
You are going to find out that Entercom will simply stretch it out in terms of a more diverse playlist which will keep things a little more interesting. Personally, I'm sick of all the 90s music that seems to be the latest radio fad BUT to be fair, I am sick of the 90s music played on your main iheart/cumulus radio station. In St. Louis, KPNT, which is a harder leaning alternative station, has a "way back weekend" about once a month and a "way back at five" for the rush hour. It consists of 90s alternative and hard rock songs BUT unlike the same old 90s crap you hear on most rock stations like Iheart, the cuts tend to be deeper with lots of one hit wonders.

One other thing; You mentioned KQRC and Project. For starters, I think Project played a lot more 90s than KQRC. Those 90s songs were your typical 90s rock songs you would expect to hear. By contrast, KQRC doesn't play as much 90s music with a few exception like lunch time. In addition, when KQRC plays 90s rock songs, much like KPNT (owned by Emmis), the 90s cuts are deeper. Bigger companies simply won't go as adventurous in the playlist. Their playlists consists of songs that were individually picked, tested and researched.

Hot AC is not my cup of tea but it will be very interesting to see how Star 94 tweaks the playlist in the course of the next few months.
 
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Back in the early 90s B98.5 and Star 94 were at each other with B98.5 playing all-70s weekends and Star all-80s.
 
I remember that. B98.5 does reserve the last four hours of Saturday night to Dan Cortese Retro Pop Reunion. Great show with mostly 80s. I still say Star does the 90s Rick Dees Weekly Top 40 on maybe Saturday and plays the current Hot AC version on maybe Sunday. There's a big group of us that grew up with Rick and I think it would do the station some good. However, I don't know how much longer Rick has before he retires. He's 65 and doesn't have many affiliates across the U.S. I listen to him on the Tune In Pro App Sunday's on Entercom's sister station FM100 in Memphis. Good luck emailing the PD at Star 94. He never responds back to my emails...probably cause I bug him about putting Dees back on the air all the time.
 
Have always loved Star's 90's weekend. They sound pretty good. Interesting to hear 1999's "Praise You" by Fatboy Slim as it was only a minor hit here in the states.
 
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When Scott Lindy first introduced Star 94's Big 90's Weekend, they did it every week. At first, ratings were great, and then the ratings started suggesting burnout. So then Star started playing a 90's song every 3 or 4 songs, then weeks later changed to occasionally playing a song from the "Big 90's Playlist." Also at this time, Star 94 was carrying the Falcons, which brought the station some additional male listeners. The Big 90's Weekend was reintroduced last year about once per month, and then went to holiday weekends only (which is what I thought made the most sense).

Now with Lindy having left the station, John Dimick (LFM's national head of programming) has brought the Big 90's Weekend back every week. He's taking a risk of burnout, but at this point with ratings down and new ownership coming, they might as well try it.

I've noticed some other changes in the past week or so. The stopsets seem to have been moved from :15 and :45 to other places on the clock.

What I have felt was hurting Star 94 the most was how conservative the music was. The other day, I was surprised to hear the original version of "Nothin' On You" by B.O.B. including the rap. When the song charted, Star edited it to remove the rap. To me, the song seems acceptable to a Hot AC audience even with the rap. In addition to not playing songs that have any hint of hip-hop, another major flaw in Star's music was how long they waited to add songs. Finally, although Hot AC is a heavily recurrent format, I've believed Star kept songs much too long.
 
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It sounds like Star is becoming more like a HOT AC station out in Denver owned by Entercom. I don't understand why people have mentioned Alpha Media and/or CBS to take over. ?!?!
 
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It sounds like Star is becoming more like a HOT AC station out in Denver owned by Entercom. I don't understand why people have mentioned Alpha Media and/or CBS to take over. ?!?!

Most likely CBS will end up with 94.1. & 790. That will give the CBS Atlanta radio sales dept. V103, 929 The Game, 1340, plus what ever Star, and 790 the zone end up being. Station clusters are usually cheaper to run and gives the sales dept. "more bullets" to fire at a customer.

Facilities wise of the original 7 in town, full power commercial FM signals (92.9, 94.1, 96.1 98.5, 99.7, 101.5 103.3) CBS will have 3 of them.
 
Star 94 just revamped their website. It does not look like Entercom's website so it seems to be that the merger is pulling out or not going to proceed.
 
Technically 94.1 is still a LFM station. Unless there is an agreement in the purchase contract such as an LMA, the employees are suppose to work as if nothing's happening. I personally have been thru it twice. Who knows when it revamping was scheduled?
 
Star 94 just revamped their website. It does not look like Entercom's website so it seems to be that the merger is pulling out or not going to proceed.

I wouldn't judge whether the acquisition is going to happen by how the new website looks. I doubt that has anything to do with it.
 
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