Last Night, I was listening to Big 103 when I heard promos for the station but I didn't hear the station's nickname on the air. So I am wondering if there might be a format chance to that station in the near future.
Why would there be two industry terms for the same thing? "Big 103" is Variety Hits (or Adult Hits by some). The differences are usually a wider playlist, usually more Rock leaning, and in some implementations can include currents or recurrents.Actually 103 can be called adult hits but
that could just be classic hits with a different name.
WROR Classic Hits, WZLX Classic Rock and WBGB Adult Hits are all distinct formats. Do they share some songs? Sure. When Taylor Swift and Harry Styles release something new, Top 40, Hot AC and AC stations all play it. All three formats share some songs. But that doesn't make them interchangeable.WROR and WBGB brand as classic hits while ZLX brands as classic rock but maybe gets into some classic hits territory. If 103 were to change..to what? Owners are Beasley, Audacy, and iHeart, respectively. Actually 103 can be called adult hits but that could just be classic hits with a different name.
Last Night, I was listening to Big 103 when I heard promos for the station but I didn't hear the station's nickname on the air. So I am wondering if there might be a format chance to that station in the near future.
Z100 was running a K-pop show Sunday night.
Why was WBGB not using "Big 103" in its promo? Good question. You don't usually make a mistake like that. But I just heard the station say "Big 103" in the first break I was listening to.
Format descriptors and marketing statements are not the same thing. I can put that RadioDiscussions is "America's #1 Puppy Training Academy" on the banner at the top of the site. It doesn't make it what it is.103 may be Variety Hits but Audacy says
"BIG 103 Boston is the station that plays Classic Hits for Boston"
Sunday night? They may have been running a generic format from another location. Depends what you mean by a promo.
I wouldn't base anything on Sunday night. Z100 was running a K-pop show Sunday night. They're not flipping formats.
Also, listeners have been hearing "classic hits" mentioned on radio stations for several years, as "oldies" has become a forbidden word. AFAIK, the phrases "variety hits" and "adult hits" have never been spoken on air on any station with a format described as such.Format descriptors and marketing statements are not the same thing. I can put that RadioDiscussions is "America's #1 Puppy Training Academy" on the banner at the top of the site. It doesn't make it what it is.
All iHeart CHR runs the K-Pop show from what I know. Regardless of whether they like it or not. There's a distinct fanbase of mostly teenagers that they are trying to get attention from.
It's market #10, and the entire frickin' format is predicated upon image elements. They didn't and don't use "cookie-cutter" anything.As for WBGB, they might have been running some cookie cutter image elements and forgot to drop the station name in there based on how this was described.
It's market #10, and the entire frickin' format is predicated upon image elements. They didn't and don't use "cookie-cutter" anything.
"Forgot to drop the station name in there." Jesus Christ, how incompetent do you think Boston radio pros are?
You'd be surprised at how much cookie cutter imaging these companies use. Basically generic liners and then they add a station name into it with the same VO, either in the production or the automation. Obviously it's more commonly used in smaller markets. Clear Channel did this on their CHR stations for a long time, didn't matter how big the market was. iHeart still does it.
If it was generic imaging, or a generic promo, human error or an automation error could have caused it.
Audio or it never happened.I haven't heard it lately, but in the past, I'd swear WBZ-AM's TOH-ID in at least the 12-3am period was sporadically "...and WXKS-FM-HD2, Harrisburg" (a few times it sounded like Fitchburg or Pittsburg)! Then I would try to catch the next TOHID and it would clearly be "...-HD2, Medford (which sometimes sounds like 'Bedford')". It is easy to mishear Bedford for Medford, but H-, F- or P-burg? I thought it might be an automated ID assembly error.
Big 103's playlist, in my opinion, could be accurately described as either classic hits or variety hits.Format descriptors and marketing statements are not the same thing. I can put that RadioDiscussions is "America's #1 Puppy Training Academy" on the banner at the top of the site. It doesn't make it what it is.
Big 103's playlist, in my opinion, could be accurately described as either classic hits or variety hits.
To suggest the station cannot legitimately be labeled "classic hits" is off the mark. Your analogy, although clever, is misleading when applying it to this specific example.
I am not seeing any songs more recent than 20 years of age.
The vast majority of artists on that playlist are heard on my local Audacy classic hits station. Out of the 40 most recently played artists, at least 38 are played on WOMC, a station everyone would agree is classic hits.
WROR was a top 5 station in June in both A25 to 54 and A18 to 49. While I suspect you are correct their strongest AQH share comes from 45 to 64, I am skeptical that is what they primarily tout for ad sales purposes.