When those of us who grew up in the 50's and 60s were kids and we got a new 45, we take it home and play it over and over and over. 20 or 30 times the first day was not enough.
No wonder all those used 45's from the 50's and 60's sound so horribly!
When those of us who grew up in the 50's and 60s were kids and we got a new 45, we take it home and play it over and over and over. 20 or 30 times the first day was not enough.
so Oldies and his silly notions of variety can take a hike. Play the song 20 times in a row. Then take the next song and play it ten times in a row. Play the #3 song five times in a row. Then repeat.
but does that mean that KPWR's listeners want to hear it four times an hour? I'd love for someone to poll those listeners.
Is there a logical reason? Does the station benefit? Do the ratings improve? And what would Rutherford B. Hayes think?
I just wonder why any station would do that. Is there a logical reason?
Here is a hard hitting fact.
In 1983 KKHR 93.1 FM adopted a top 40 format, KKHR, was not a traditional top 40 music format station of the time, as the play list was more stringent limited to 30 songs
In 1986 the top 40 format ran it's course, likely due to lackluster ratings.
To err is human.
Guess what the song of the hour is.
Instead of Rutherford B. Hayes, think of Alfred E. Neuman.
Not everyone listens for a full hour.
That's practically torture for listeners that have to deal with Power 106 at work because their co-workers like it.
The biggest reason "Hitradio 93" failed to attract listeners is that they were up against KIIS-FM, which was giving away a Porsche 944 with $10,000 in the glovebox every Friday. CBS didn't get into the "big prize" game until the fall of 1985, and by then it was too late ... even then it was "only" a Nissan 300-ZX, not a Porsche, although they did match the $10,000 in the glovebox. KIIS killed all challengers during the 1980s with its big spending and Rick Dees -- notably KIQQ, which ended up going "light rock" a few years later.
Don't blame the music for KKHR's demise. It was the most uptempo CHR ever, with flamethrower air talent like Jack Armstrong, and a playlist which was deliberately devoid of downtempo songs. I liked it even more than I had Ten-Q in the 1970s.
There's some hard-hitting facts for ya, James.
Tell you what ... I'll dig up Gordon McLendon's body and see if I can bring him back to life and explain why, when he purchased KROW in Oakland in 1959, he played the song "Gila Monster" over and over again -- with no other songs at all -- for two weeks before changing the call letters to KABL and the format to Beautiful Music. Actually, I don't need to desecrate the old Scotsman's grave, because I know the answer: It's called a "stunt", sir.
Here is a hard hitting fact.
In 1983 KKHR 93.1 FM adopted a top 40 format, KKHR, was not a traditional top 40 music format station of the time, as the play list was more stringent limited to 30 songs
In 1986 the top 40 format ran it's course, likely due to lackluster ratings.
See history
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/KCBS-FM