J
JohnParker
Guest
Jimi, once again, is correct. Radio is a business and unless someone can prove that more than the 3,000 club goers in a city are going to listen to their station why on earth would they take a chance playing unfamiliar music. They have a hard enough time getting the "popular" records to research. Imagine going to Coke or Pepsi and say hey guys my friends and I love this new (fill in the blank) flavored soda and I know that if you put it out in every store in America it would be a hit. What kind of response do you think you'd get? Probably the same kind that radio is giving. No research proving a theory equals no weight to said theory. This is all about Dollars & Sense. If it don't make dollars, it don't make sense. Welcome to radio past, present and future.Also, as has previously been well documented, this ain't Europe. Over there the music never left the publics eye and has, as a result, become part of the culture. And for the record, the music is having major problems across the pond as well. A bunch of American DJ's playing Europe in no way equates to commercial radio success here. Why do those same dj's not find the same success in America if their is such a demand here? I'm not talking about selling out some 2,500 person club. Anyone want to guess what the most popular Non-format show on KTU is? Not the weekend mixshows playing club music but Judy Torres' Freestyle show. How could that be if the demand for Club Music on the radio is so big?I can sit here and debate this all day, if I didn't have a job getting those hit dance records noticed, but unless someone wants to start stating some facts and/or research as to why this would work there really isn't anything to debate. I can't really debate with someone that simply states opinion all day. That's the way you feel and that's ok but without factual evidence that presents your side of the case better, I don't see how you'll gain any attention to your cause. I just read this post by MikeO (Energy98) this morning on another message board (I have tried putting the site here but the form keeps changing the name of it, interesting). He has programmed on the net where he can do as he wants and on an FM dance station in Phoenix. He sums this up best when he wrote:"The key to a successful pure dance station is that it has to make money. The only way it can make money is if it plays to the 18-34 (25-44 midday) demo and pulls the numbers. This can't be done by flushing songs that become 'too popular'. You can't have success and be obscure too. There are people(that) like to hear new songs all the time, but they are not enough out there to sustain a radio station."This is from someone that does this everyday and is on the front lines in trying to expose new music.jp