So playing international hits like California Love and Gangsta's Paradise means that K-Earth will be a full-fledged gangsta rap station. Got it.Ughhhhh. K-Earth is not K-Day
So playing international hits like California Love and Gangsta's Paradise means that K-Earth will be a full-fledged gangsta rap station. Got it.Ughhhhh. K-Earth is not K-Day
And KHJ wasn't KGFJ and KIIS wasn't the AM KDAY. But to succeed in Los Angeles, some of those stations' playlists were crucial on KHJ and KIIS.Ughhhhh. K-Earth is not K-Day
For the oldies crowd, yes. For the population that actually listens to KRTH today, no.So playing international hits like California Love and Gangsta's Paradise means that K-Earth will be a full-fledged gangsta rap station. Got it.
Some interesting things to note. If Coolio were alive today, he would turn 60 this year. And LL Cool J recently turned 55. Jay Z is not that far off.For the oldies crowd, yes. For the population that actually listens to KRTH today, no.
"We can't play the Eagles' "Hotel California" seven times a day or they get mad. We can't play Tupac's "California Love" even once or they get mad."For the oldies crowd, yes. For the population that actually listens to KRTH today, no.
You are right...but I think Hot AC (KBIG) played them in LA. They were all over kc back in the 00s (which was more of a hot ac "town" back then.)Daughtry, Matchbox Twenty, etc were not KIIS staples. Nor are they featured prominently on their respective Spotify "All Out" decades playlist, so I can't imagine someone from Scranton wanting to hear Daughtrygroancroon that badly. Daughtry, Hinder, and the like are not even on AOR stations today!
And what makes Daughtry more appealing than, say, the Vengaboys? Hardly anyone is nostalgic for safe post-grunge.
True. But I don't think an alternative/indie crowd that is versed with the likes of Lana Del Rey, etc would want to hear Daughtry or Nickelback, especially a crowd that is SoCal-infused. Hell, I'm not sure if people who listen to the Imagine Dragons would have a manic obsession with Daughtry, either.You are right...but I think Hot AC played them in LA. They were all over kc back in the 00s (which was more of a hot ac "town" back then.)
The natural evolution is what the audience says it wants.For me, theres songs in the 90s/00s which feel more like a natural evolution of classic hits than that though like:
John Mayer
Sarah maclauchlan
Rob thomas/matchbox 20
Natasha bedingfield
Lifehouse
James blunt
Daughtry
Paula cole
Natalie imbruglia
Dido
KTWV is the market's "de facto" Soft AC, if it's even a thing. KRTH markets themselves as "70s, 80s, 90s", not as a "lite" station; previously, they were known to play "the greatest hits on Earth!"The funny thing is, I'm not sure KTWV is playing TuPac or Coolio. The Soul of Southern California plays almost no rap. Too busy playing Anita Baker, Luther Vandross, Sting and Sade. I even heard So Far Away by Carole King last week on The Wave.
I even heard So Far Away by Carole King last week on The Wave.
K-Earth isn’t your parents’ oldies station anymore, Nick. The station is evolving accordingly.Ughhhhh. K-Earth is not K-Day
That’s right. People thought that hip hop was a fad but they were wrong.Don't look now, but hip hop has been mainstream for 25 years now.
And meanwhile those of us in our 60s who are supposedly “too old” for radio are stuck with KKGO HD4If KRTH is playing it, you can bet it was tested and it tested very well.
Demographic reality check. Today's 45 year old:
Was born in 1978.
Graduated high school in 1996.
Graduated college in 2000.
Los Angeles is 27% non-hispanic white.
The people who thought KRTH should be a reincarnation of KHJ freaked out when it morphed into a reincarnation of KIIS ten years ago.
Welcome to the Power 106 years, guys.
"The Hip-Hop of Your Life"Some interesting things to note. If Coolio were alive today, he would turn 60 this year. And LL Cool J recently turned 55. Jay Z is not that far off.
Oh, and if Eazy-E was alive today, he would be 59 this year. Dr Dre will turn 58 in February.
That 55+ crowd will look different as the years go by. Pretty soon, you'll hear U Can't Touch This on "America's Best Music" stations!
"There's so much drama in the LBC that we're going to have Snoop D-O-double-G tell us all about it in just a moment, but first, I'd like to talk to you about reverse mortgages...""The Hip-Hop of Your Life"
KIIS got a 10 share from buying the side of every RTD bus in L.A. County, telling people Rick Dees was giving away a Porsche 944 with $25,000 in the glovebox every Friday morning.I have to think that as the "classic hits" format moves into the 1990s and 2000s, they are going to run into the problem of music becoming more segmented.
The 1980s was really the last decade of the mass appeal hit. The days of a CHR like KIIS getting a 10 share ended.
Is there really an audience that wants to hear grunge, rap and pop on one station?