scooty430 said:Fair enough. You raise good points, none of which I can really disagree with.
You have to admit that the "let's play 300 songs for twenty years" is a recipe for doom. Eventually, the audience burns out.
For K-Earth, they were really starting to sink a few years ago in the ratings with their deadly dull list of 250 burnt to a crisp songs. What saved them? Expanding the playlist. They added in an entire decade, and also jumped from 300 songs in the list to about 700. They also began toying with a few specials where they actually played 1000 or even 2000 songs.
Now let's look at the other station in town that does this: KLOS. KLOS perhaps attracts an OK demo of middle aged men, but their overall numbers get lower and lower. They've been playing the same songs for too long. It's just boring.
Eventually, KLOS will have to do something. They just won't be able to keep playing those same 500 titles forever.
What's been an interesting new entry? JACK. With 2000 titles (according to the PD) or 1000 (according to David Eduardo's search of Mediabase), they got huge ratings at first, and are still chugging along.
So here's the basic point: This "play the safe songs" approach makes sense in the short-term to get a huge number of people who will at least tune in a few times a week. But in the long-term, it makes people disenchanted and bored with radio. And this is why people, especially young people, are spending their time on youtube, Pandora, itunes, Last.fm, MySpace, AIM, and all kinds of other places. It's interactive, it's fresh, it's individual, and it's not boring.
A lot of otherwise talented people, perhaps yourself included, are caught up in this radio culture and pressure from above to do certain things.
scooty430 said:- Do all the #1s in order. Or all the #2s. Or the 1s, then the 2s.
scooty430 said:The #100 weekend. All songs charting at a peak of 100. Just from a curiosity standpoint it would be really interesting! (Please don't tell me this is a ratings killer - duh, I know that!)
Maybe Bob Shannon can do this on his Behind the Hits some week.
Marv-L.A. said:Doing another one of those 'Number One Songs Of Rock & Roll' weekends would be a blast; I recall hearing everything from 1955's 'Yellow Rose Of Texas' to 1977's 'Year Of The Cat' (which I also heard a few weeks ago during their 'Parade Of Hits' weekend...at 12:55 AM on a Sunday morning) during a weekend many years ago.
TheBigA said:Here's my idea: Start your own radio station, do whatever you want to do, and none of us have to listen.
And spend an entire day doing all foreign songs, like Sukiyaki, Dominique, and Tie Me Kangaroo Down.
It's called musical masturbation.
Zeb Norris said:scooty430 said:Fair enough. You raise good points, none of which I can really disagree with.
You have to admit that the "let's play 300 songs for twenty years" is a recipe for doom. Eventually, the audience burns out.
For K-Earth, they were really starting to sink a few years ago in the ratings with their deadly dull list of 250 burnt to a crisp songs. What saved them? Expanding the playlist. They added in an entire decade, and also jumped from 300 songs in the list to about 700. They also began toying with a few specials where they actually played 1000 or even 2000 songs.
Now let's look at the other station in town that does this: KLOS. KLOS perhaps attracts an OK demo of middle aged men, but their overall numbers get lower and lower. They've been playing the same songs for too long. It's just boring.
Eventually, KLOS will have to do something. They just won't be able to keep playing those same 500 titles forever.
What's been an interesting new entry? JACK. With 2000 titles (according to the PD) or 1000 (according to David Eduardo's search of Mediabase), they got huge ratings at first, and are still chugging along.
So here's the basic point: This "play the safe songs" approach makes sense in the short-term to get a huge number of people who will at least tune in a few times a week. But in the long-term, it makes people disenchanted and bored with radio. And this is why people, especially young people, are spending their time on youtube, Pandora, itunes, Last.fm, MySpace, AIM, and all kinds of other places. It's interactive, it's fresh, it's individual, and it's not boring.
A lot of otherwise talented people, perhaps yourself included, are caught up in this radio culture and pressure from above to do certain things.
I'm glad we're having a regular discussion.
Your point about Jack is a good one. One might be able to do well in Oldies with a list bigger than 500. But in any event, they have to be super familiar hits.
Specialty shows certainly can add to the perception of depth, but I'd be careful with that... especially in LA, where in-car listening is so very important.
Another way to keep it fresh is "platooning" songs in and out of rotation. Up in San Francisco that's a technique that helped KFRC FM get past KYA FM back in the 80's or 90's...
As to young people not being big radio boosters, there are an awful lot of factors contributing to that. One is that most stations want to target 25 to 54 year olds, because that's what the ad agencies want. Which does NOTHING to help build radio usage among the 25 to 54 year olds of tomorrow (On that subject, for us older types it would be nice if 35 to 64 was considered a desirable demo; but sadly it isn't... which has led to lots of Oldies stations flipping out of the format).
Also, young people are drawn to cutting edge technology, which helped build up FM back in the 60's when it was a distant also-ran to AM, yet had better fidelity and was in stereo.
But I can assure you with complete confidence that tight rotations on Oldies stations is not a contributing factor to Radio's problem with younger people. As a demographic, they simply don't care at all about Oldies.
scooty430 said:I have a better idea. Just turn on any terrestrial radio station. They might as well be spankin' the monkey too, because nobody is really listening.
Wake up.
scooty430 said:I wonder if the thinking on demos will ever change. Today's 40 or 50 or 60 year old is not the same as its equivalent in 1955, yet we are still using the same mentality, that they are not worth reaching. That puzzles me.
You'd be surprised how many younger people like oldies. They are somewhat timeless. They're helped by exposure in movies, at baseball games, on TV shows, in ads. The problem is that one can get these oldies instantly online, so why sit around listening to some boring radio station that plays the same set of them all day.
As for JACK, it is essentially the "new" version of an Oldies station, except it's 80s.
But we need more sources of music than just JACK, and JACK has a horrendous jaded announcer voice and phoney self-mocking attitude that is nauseatingly juvenile.
Differnet subject....KRTH definitely uses the "platooning" method you describe. I'll use "Classical Gas" as an example. That chestnut pops into their playlist every so often, then promptly disappears. It's a good strategy.
But nothing substitutes for an authentically deep playlist. Keep it small, and you will eventually die.
DavidEduardo said:scooty430 said:I wonder if the thinking on demos will ever change. Today's 40 or 50 or 60 year old is not the same as its equivalent in 1955, yet we are still using the same mentality, that they are not worth reaching. That puzzles me.
Go fight this one with Lever and P&G and COke and McDonalds and...
The decision to focus on 18-48, 18-34 and 25-54 as the buy demos (or some subset of them) is an advertiser dictate, handed to the agency with the instructions, "buy against this group."
You'd be surprised how many younger people like oldies. They are somewhat timeless. They're helped by exposure in movies, at baseball games, on TV shows, in ads. The problem is that one can get these oldies instantly online, so why sit around listening to some boring radio station that plays the same set of them all day.
The thing is that under-45's nearly don't listen at all to oldeis, and uder-35's don't listen to classic hits, and when we find the exceptions, it's mostly people who had no choice... in an office or workplace, in the car with family, etc. And, for whatever the reason, the listening by out-of-demo listeners is so minute as to be insignificant and unsalable.
As for JACK, it is essentially the "new" version of an Oldies station, except it's 80s.
No, it's not 80's. It's 70's, 80's, 90's, this decade and even an occasional 60's tune. That is why it is called "Adult Hits" by the industry.
The playlist is a mile wide and an inch deep.
But we need more sources of music than just JACK, and JACK has a horrendous jaded announcer voice and phoney self-mocking attitude that is nauseatingly juvenile.
The listeners who like the Jack music have been pretty much found to hate DJs, and they like the "anti-jock" attitude. The music and the attitude go together. When Jack station, like Chicago, have tried high profile personalities, they tank.
Differnet subject....KRTH definitely uses the "platooning" method you describe. I'll use "Classical Gas" as an example. That chestnut pops into their playlist every so often, then promptly disappears. It's a good strategy.
To me, it looks like a fill song. Maybe a manual fill... "fill" meaning a song you use if the scheduler does not come up with something and gives an unscheduled position. I know one station where this kind of category has a median turn of 79 days, but the low end is about 12 days and the high end a whopping 210 days.
But nothing substitutes for an authentically deep playlist. Keep it small, and you will eventually die.
Substitute "deep" for "tight" and "small" for "broad" and you are right. Your statement, as is, is a sure-fire, guaranteed formula for ratings disaster and the industry history is littered with fine examples of changed formats and fired PDs who were the results of a deep library format.
DavidEduardo said:Substitute "deep" for "tight" and "small" for "broad" and you are right. Your statement, as is, is a sure-fire, guaranteed formula for ratings disaster and the industry history is littered with fine examples of changed formats and fired PDs who were the results of a deep library format.
oldies76 said:CBS-FM is still chugging along with their thousands of hits and specials last I heard, haven't heard of any PD firings yet there. Sounds like a successful classic hits format going on there. By the way, if under 45's don't listen to oldies and under 35's don't listen to Cl. hits, then why is the target audience 25-54..shouldn't it be only 45-55+ ?
TheBigA said:scooty430 said:I have a better idea. Just turn on any terrestrial radio station. They might as well be spankin' the monkey too, because nobody is really listening.
Wake up.
Hmmm...then how is it you know so much about what they do?
scooty430 said:How about you? Do YOU like listening to Brown Eyed Girl over and over? If so, why? Help me to understand the appeal.
DavidEduardo said:scooty430 said:I wonder if the thinking on demos will ever change. Today's 40 or 50 or 60 year old is not the same as its equivalent in 1955, yet we are still using the same mentality, that they are not worth reaching. That puzzles me.
Go fight this one with Lever and P&G and COke and McDonalds and...
The decision to focus on 18-48, 18-34 and 25-54 as the buy demos (or some subset of them) is an advertiser dictate, handed to the agency with the instructions, "buy against this group."
You'd be surprised how many younger people like oldies. They are somewhat timeless. They're helped by exposure in movies, at baseball games, on TV shows, in ads. The problem is that one can get these oldies instantly online, so why sit around listening to some boring radio station that plays the same set of them all day.
The thing is that under-45's nearly don't listen at all to oldeis, and uder-35's don't listen to classic hits, and when we find the exceptions, it's mostly people who had no choice... in an office or workplace, in the car with family, etc. And, for whatever the reason, the listening by out-of-demo listeners is so minute as to be insignificant and unsalable.
As for JACK, it is essentially the "new" version of an Oldies station, except it's 80s.
No, it's not 80's. It's 70's, 80's, 90's, this decade and even an occasional 60's tune. That is why it is called "Adult Hits" by the industry.
The playlist is a mile wide and an inch deep.
But we need more sources of music than just JACK, and JACK has a horrendous jaded announcer voice and phoney self-mocking attitude that is nauseatingly juvenile.
The listeners who like the Jack music have been pretty much found to hate DJs, and they like the "anti-jock" attitude. The music and the attitude go together. When Jack station, like Chicago, have tried high profile personalities, they tank.
Differnet subject....KRTH definitely uses the "platooning" method you describe. I'll use "Classical Gas" as an example. That chestnut pops into their playlist every so often, then promptly disappears. It's a good strategy.
To me, it looks like a fill song. Maybe a manual fill... "fill" meaning a song you use if the scheduler does not come up with something and gives an unscheduled position. I know one station where this kind of category has a median turn of 79 days, but the low end is about 12 days and the high end a whopping 210 days.
But nothing substitutes for an authentically deep playlist. Keep it small, and you will eventually die.
Substitute "deep" for "tight" and "small" for "broad" and you are right. Your statement, as is, is a sure-fire, guaranteed formula for ratings disaster and the industry history is littered with fine examples of changed formats and fired PDs who were the results of a deep library format.
TheBigA said:scooty430 said:How about you? Do YOU like listening to Brown Eyed Girl over and over? If so, why? Help me to understand the appeal.
I don't. I have a life. But when the song comes on, I always turn it up and sing with the chorus. La dee da.
By the same token, I have thousands and thousands of records (yes, vinyl) and can listen to every song Them or Van ever recorded. I even own the Shadows of Knight's follow-up to "Gloria." So I can quote all the record geek stuff for you. But I also understand that not everyone is a geek like me, and they just want to hear their favorite songs. For them, there's radio.
scooty430 said:I miss, though, the times when radio could introduce me to something like Van, something like "Into the Mystic" rather than just Moondance. This is why people like Pandora - it says, "hey, how about this song?"
scooty430 said:Big picture, every song is unfamiliar to everybody at some point. The idea that you can never play unfamiliar songs is patently absurd. You have to.
DavidEduardo said:scooty430 said:Big picture, every song is unfamiliar to everybody at some point. The idea that you can never play unfamiliar songs is patently absurd. You have to.
... not on stations that create listener expectations of presenting familiar and favorite songs. That's their whole appeal, in fact, and presenting songs that are unfamiliar or a hazy memory violates expectations and kills TSL. I've seen this on specialty shows that go deep or focus on a particular aspect of music of the past, using MediaMonitor tracking, and those unfamiliar or only vaguely familiar songs are killers. End result: those specialty shows are gone, and ratings are up nearly 200%.