As good as A to Z was, it could have been better. KLOS once published a printed copy of A to Z songs, and there were many songs on that list that they didn't play. "Zero to Sixty in Five", by Pablo Cruise, was one of them.
Zeb Norris said:Yeah, you don't get it... and get the hell offa my lawn!
I wonder what KLOS (and other CR stations) would sound like if they stripped all of their sweepers and actually used their jocks live voice to deliver the same verbiage. Kinda reminds me of the glory days of KGB-FM. Just typing out loud...
This is correct. For many many years AOR stations didn't ID in a set. Sets ranged from 3 to 5 songs. Sometimes more. And it worked.
To be fair to D.E., this was mostly before the 80/90 docket, when there were fewer stations in most markets.
But with PPM, the device knows what the station is with or without IDs. So the purpose of the ID is no longer to aid recall, just to teach the listener what and where the station is so they can come back later.
BTW, I wouldn't hold any newspaper up as a marvel of successful branding. More and more, only the guys who want you off their lawns read the print editions. While these are tough times for radio, they're way worse for newspapers. Just sayin'.
DavidEduardo said:Scooty and Oldies 76 argue, factlessly, against everything from rotations to the research major advertisers do on consumer behaviour.
This pretty nicely fits the definition whereby insanity is doing the same thing over and over hoping for a different outcome.
DavidEduardo said:Zeb Norris said:Yeah, you don't get it... and get the hell offa my lawn!
There is a point at which, despite numerous statements of fact, when a person continues to base their thinking on personal taste vs. the broader interests of a whole audience that it is necessary to give up any hope of correcting the misconceptions. Scooty and Oldies 76 argue, factlessly, against everything from rotations to the research major advertisers do on consumer behaviour.
This pretty nicely fits the definition whereby insanity is doing the same thing over and over hoping for a different outcome.
I wonder what KLOS (and other CR stations) would sound like if they stripped all of their sweepers and actually used their jocks live voice to deliver the same verbiage. Kinda reminds me of the glory days of KGB-FM. Just typing out loud...
Likely it would sound monotonous, and invite too much talk, giving the impression of stopping down more often.
This is correct. For many many years AOR stations didn't ID in a set. Sets ranged from 3 to 5 songs. Sometimes more. And it worked.
So did beautiful music. That format is gone, and AOR / Classic rock learned that sets with no identity in a multimedia world did not get credit in the ratings or build any positive brand.
To be fair to D.E., this was mostly before the 80/90 docket, when there were fewer stations in most markets.
Absolutely... and SB has never had any decent AM signals... for a while KIST on the rooftop on State was #1!!!
But with PPM, the device knows what the station is with or without IDs. So the purpose of the ID is no longer to aid recall, just to teach the listener what and where the station is so they can come back later.
I think, in the broader picture, that is more important than pushing memory recall. With PPM, listening incidents are shorter... much shorter... so getting return visits is very critical. And P1's as a % of cume are fewer (of course, half the cume is useless anyway).
BTW, I wouldn't hold any newspaper up as a marvel of successful branding. More and more, only the guys who want you off their lawns read the print editions. While these are tough times for radio, they're way worse for newspapers. Just sayin'.
All true. But the brands were effective as long as the product was on the growth or maturation locations on the growth curve. Once there were better, faster and easier alternatives, the medium went into decline. So all that are left are the crotchety old retirees who can talke an hour to read the stuff I saw on Drudge yesterday.
david91326 said:As good as A to Z was, it could have been better. KLOS once published a printed copy of A to Z songs, and there were many songs on that list that they didn't play. "Zero to Sixty in Five", by Pablo Cruise, was one of them.
david91326 said:They could go up to 3000 or 4000 titles if they REALLY wanted to make it interesting....
scooty430 said:They could go up to 3000 or 4000 titles if they REALLY wanted to make it interesting....
DavidEduardo said:scooty430 said:They could go up to 3000 or 4000 titles if they REALLY wanted to make it interesting....
It woulld have been not only interesting, but profitable, for their competitors who would have eaten their lunch for a month while those songs were played.
I have mentioned it before, but a couple of years ago the classic rocker I was consulting and programming was playing a tight list of around 500 songs. Another station came one with 1800 songs, give or take.
After nearly a year, we retained our 20 share and the competitor had a 1.8 share, and soon after changed format.
Playing stiffs gets no listeners. Playing fewer songs, but hits, got us over 4 million listeners and made us #1.
scooty430 said:But like any gimmick, it will lose its luster if overused. Hopefully radio guys will come up with some other compelling ideas. They'll have to, if they want to survive.
charles hobbs said:scooty430 said:But like any gimmick, it will lose its luster if overused. Hopefully radio guys will come up with some other compelling ideas. They'll have to, if they want to survive.
Hmm, how about Z to A? (grinning, ducking and running...)