I found even more interesting; that KLUV went "harder" classic singles with the demise of Platinum rather than softer. Although I loved much of what I heard on Platinum musically (Examples are the Pet Clark singles, etc.) I think what this demise and KLUV's change means is that with rare exceptions; popular songs before 1970 or so are now going to be relegated to the AM dial.
Although I will miss much of the music on Platinum; I will not miss the weekend driving with just the on-air imaging without anyone in the studio to talk. I think, and I understand the corporate view; that the lack of air personalities truly hurt the station. Let's face it, being live and local from 5AM to 7 PM cuts off a great deal of the day. Shoot, even KLUV at least has gone back to John Summers V-Ting a shift so it sounds local in the evening rather than syndicating Tom Kent.
I also found interesting; that KVIL has been broadcasting the promos for the KLUV HD Stations. I guess that's not to upset those listeners on KLUV who may not be adjusting well to Aerosmith, etc. What's next for KLUV:
"Jump" by Van Halen; "Here I go Again" by Whitesnake; etc.
Sorry for the trains of thought here; but I think the last two weeks have been fascinating for fans of older pop music like myself.