SFStatic said:Now there is only in-home and away from home. Welcome to the people meter.
Fastphilly said:Elvis Presley made just of big of an impact on Rock as the Beatles...Elvis Presley for intent and purposes has been dropped from all commercial radio stations in the last 15+ years...Now it's time for the Beatles and 60's Motown to follow the same path..
DavidEduardo said:SFStatic said:Now there is only in-home and away from home. Welcome to the people meter.
Arbitron is in final testing of a device that will allow the PPM to "know" when it is in the car, just as it does to know it is "in the home."
Fastphilly said:Elvis Presley made just of big of an impact on Rock as the Beatles.
Fastphilly said:...I'm a big fan of Top 40 in past years, but being 36, I'd would like to have my generation of Top40 (80's) given their time in the Classic Hits limelight.
gameon said:the bigger issue at kfrc is it seems to me the fact that they are targeting an audience that is older and thus less likely to try new things (like the 106.9 frequency) This is a marketing problem....they need more awareness of the signal and that will take about $2 million in media spend.
when was the last time you saw a kfrc tv spot? or billboard....
new frequency is the issue. This incarnation of kfrc is very similar to the final incarnation when they blew it up at 997 in summer of 2006. On that familiar frequency, it was doing much much bigger numbers numbers cbs would kill for now. those listeners have all ended up on the myriad of other stations that share music with kfrc (kbay, koit, kufx, kfog, ksan, kuic, kkdv, kkiq, kioi, et al). That 45-54 core will only adjust -sets in their cars if their battery dies. Or maybe when they get a new car (which most likely will have XM--which is a whole other issue)
"its the cume stupid" look at the cume for kfrc and it tells you all you need to know.
making matters worse--the cume would have been helped by the addition of a's baseball---but a's were kept on 1550 where they had been the previous season---so listeners who would have been searching for the a's and discovering the new freq for kfrc, are able to just go to the familiar spot for the a's 1550AM (another cbs property) i cant for the life of me figure out why cbs allowed a's to be carried on both stations.
landtuna said:I think most popular music historians would agree that without Elvis what we call Rock and Roll would have never happened. Elvis was, by far, the most popular white singer performing what was then called "race" music (or R&B to some people). Black musicians had been doing similar music for several years prior but it wasn't getting played on "white" radio. Elvis (and a handful of less popular white performers) broke the race barrier and it was quickly adopted by the white teens of the mid and late 50's.
Hunkey Snarkey said:These two took KFRC to the top, and were household names in the bay area!