Hoping KLOS lasts. Truly a miracle and the last rock station standing!
Yeah hope so too. Even though I don't listen to them, I like the fact they've been on the air for several decades now. Btw, nice to see you posting here again, been a long time.
Hoping KLOS lasts. Truly a miracle and the last rock station standing!
Yeah hope so too. Even though I don't listen to them, I like the fact they've been on the air for several decades now. Btw, nice to see you posting here again, been a long time.
I messaged two other people who have lived in LA for many decades, and they all said, "what?"
Why would KLOS be considered the last rock station standing? There are KROQ, KYSR and of course KCSN and its simulcast partner in the OC.
Your friends must not get out much. Pantry is an LA icon owned by former mayor Riordan that is only one block away from Staples Center.
KROQ and KYSR do not play classic rock, they are alt rock formats.
As much as I love KCSN, they do not count. Their lack of signal and lack of heritage and the fact that classic rock is only a portion of their format invalidates them from inclusion.
The stations that do count are KMET, KLOS, KLSX, Arrow 93 and The Sound (and maybe KQLZ "Pirate Radio" just for fun) are your participants in this category. Even if KLOS goes away next week, they still won. 50 years in one format is the definition of success.
KROQ and KYSR do not play classic rock, they are alt rock formats.
Rock is rock. The thing that is killing rock as a viable radio format has been the balkanization of the music.
I'm guessing that unless you are someone who goes to downtown frequently, you'd likely not know it. During one period of about 6 years I must have gone to nearly 1,000 remotes and street promotions and knew LA almost as well as a Thomas Guide... but never was in the "big building" area of downtown more than twice... once in a court case and once for a dinner. It just was not an area I'd go to intentionally.
Downtown (now called DTLA) is in something of a renaissance. A lot new, but a lot built on the history of places like The Original Pantry, Clifton’s, Cole’s, Phillipe’s and others that have been in business 100 years or more. It’s a very different place than it was even ten years ago, and well worth exploring.
I keep seeing posts on here that KDAY resonates better with Latino and African-American audiences than KLOS.
Here's a fun one for you: I'm a 34 year-old male. Super duper white kid who grew up in Salt Lake City.
My presets?
* Real 92.3
* 93.5 KDAY
* Power 106
* Alt 98.7
* KFI (for Handel -- to hell with J&K)
Do not underestimate how big 90s/2000s "Dad Rap" is with those in my demo. Among us white guys in our mid-30s: Tupac, Biggie, and Jay Z are our generation's Stones, Pink Floyd, and Van Halen.
I almost *never* listen to KLOS. While I'm always sad to see a radio legend go, I would certainly listen to KDAY a LOT on 95.5.
You remind me of a 30-something I worked with in the early years of this decade. He was white, suburban, politically conservative -- evangelical Christian to boot -- yet loved rap, especially the early stuff from the late '80s and early '90s. Rock wasn't even "dad's music" to him; it was the music of people who were old enough to be his grandfather.
Some time ago but still relevant, I was at a Halloween/fall/hayride party in suburban Dayton, Ohio shortly after one of the stations flipped to hip hop & R&B. Teenagers were in attendance and this crowd couldn't have been any whiter if it drenched itself in white house paint. The new hip hop station was blasting.
As it was with rock and roll and R&B (let's not forget that Chuck Berry and Little Richard were there in the beginning with Elvis and Buddy Holly)---it's not racial, it's generational.
One of the two times I went... anecdote alert... was for jury duty. The parking they gave me was a number of blocks away and it was all uphill to the courthouse. I can't do steep inclines, and did not make it. I contacted them, but was issued a warrant! It cost about a kilobuck to get a doctor's certificate and stuff to prove that I could not have made it on time. So much for my belief in the criminal justice system in LA.
What this does show is how divided into separate communities, groups and interests big cities are today. There may be some hidden intelligence about how this has affected talk radio, but I am not a good enough sociologist to take this to a conclusion.
I think there is a cultural divide here. I am nearly 100% involved in the Hispanic community, and other than an occasional concert at the Staples Center, downtown is not a subject of much conversation or interest. I don't recall ever doing a remote, event or promotion any closer to DTLA than the Placita Olvera, which kinda' explains why I don't know about anything else.
One of the two times I went... anecdote alert... was for jury duty. The parking they gave me was a number of blocks away and it was all uphill to the courthouse. I can't do steep inclines, and did not make it. I contacted them, but was issued a warrant! It cost about a kilobuck to get a doctor's certificate and stuff to prove that I could not have made it on time. So much for my belief in the criminal justice system in LA.
What this does show is how divided into separate communities, groups and interests big cities are today. There may be some hidden intelligence about how this has affected talk radio, but I am not a good enough sociologist to take this to a conclusion.
I think there is a cultural divide here. I am nearly 100% involved in the Hispanic community...