Frankly, the average listener back in 1979, 1985, or 1988 heard their music,
I don't give a rats what people did 40 years ago. That was then.
Frankly, the average listener back in 1979, 1985, or 1988 heard their music,
I mean, what a better way to spend the 4th of July with BBQ's, fireworks and the top 300 songs
Well now, a trip down memory lane. I remember a road trip to Los Angeles in 1987 and driving my wife absolutely crazy by tuning to K-Earth at the top of every hour just to hear their legal id. Big drums and then big voice "KRTH-FM Los Angeles, win a fantasy vacation and a thousand dollars" then the singers "K R T H - Los Angeles". That trip probably led to the divorce, "I know you like radio JIMBO but for Christ's sake would you pick a station and leave it on for just 5 f--king minutes!"
Well, at least you enjoyed it as did many Angelinos did in '87. The drums legal ID was their signature jingle, on for many, many years, since the late 70's. I believe they last aired it in 1989 or so. Kind of like the 1070 traffic horn effect before reports, these should have never been taken away. And then you had the Johnny Mann singers and their boatload of memories. It was the station of the time. The glory days! Oh yeah, that trip to Hawaii and cash, every time with Lisa Moree announcing it.....priceless!
Frankly, the average listener back in 1979, 1985, or 1988 heard their music, relished the weekends, connected with the jocks and truly enjoyed K-Earth 101 as their station of choice, as was mine. I would highly bet, the vast majority didn't give a rats what place they were in or even knew a dairy ranking system existed. The point is that they delivered.
I mean, what a better way to spend the 4th of July with BBQ's, fireworks and the top 300 songs, as voted by their true listeners, played all weekend long, a successful concept that should still be in place today. Anyone with half a brain can do that.
Frankly, the average listener back in 1979, 1985, or 1988 heard their music, relished the weekends, connected with the jocks and truly enjoyed K-Earth 101 as their station of choice, as was mine. I would highly bet, the vast majority didn't give a rats what place they were in or even knew a dairy ranking system existed. The point is that they delivered.
I mean, what a better way to spend the 4th of July with BBQ's, fireworks and the top 300 songs, as voted by their true listeners, played all weekend long, a successful concept that should still be in place today. Anyone with half a brain can do that.
Stay safe Mr. Hagerty.
No, the point is that 2nd place bills a lot more than 8th.
All radio stations "deliver". It's a matter of how many listeners there are in the delivery.
You really, really... REALLY... think that the playlist was a simple tabulation of the listener votes?
Really?
I was wondering if anyone was going to bring this point up. What radio says and what radio does are often two different things, and I think "tabulating the listeners votes" has got to be highest on that list.
You really, really... REALLY... think that the playlist was a simple tabulation of the listener votes?
Really?
For that specific countdown, known as the Firecracker 300, yes. I have all 10 countdown sheets to make a point. (1978-1987). The only exception would be from the mid 80's onward, where the station focused more on oldies than currents, so only those songs were considered, but prior to 1984 or so, some re-currents (80's music) were included if they received enough votes.
That's the impression I get. Mr. Hamilton was very unique in his ways.
Since you do not have data on the underlying music tests, you can't make a conclusion.
If you still believe that they just tabulated the votes, I have this bridge between Manhattan and one of the boroughs that I can give you a really good deal on due to the lessened traffic it is carrying... and you'd like it because it is named after a late 60's music group!
For oh so many reasons I won't touch that line...
I have the actual, factual authentic lists of songs played, that all I need. I can send them to you, if you'd like.
'The Worst That Could Happen' is ignoring votes and not counting them.
1977-1986, not a bad run!! Agree?
You have the playlists. I was telling you that without the actual raw data, you do not know how they tabulated and interpreted the votes.
That's not what's happening here. The information is voted over the internet, which itself is a bias, preventing listeners who don't have access from voting. The votes come in to the station. The station is not obligated to publish the data, nor is it required to have that data authenticated by anyone. So it leaves it up to the station to interpret the voting in a way that creates the best listening experience.
If a good portion of the votes that come in are tossed because they do not fit the playlist, then what's the POINT in having a countdown asking for listener picked songs?? The radio station should just do their own show, in their order, their way. Simple. In other words, they are changing the results to suit them, not the listeners who went out of their way to vote. Either do it right or scrap the project.
If a good portion of the votes that come in are tossed because they do not fit the playlist, then what's the POINT in having a countdown asking for listener picked songs??
I guess I am the last of a dying breed - but after IHeart Radio laid off Mark Wallengren and others at KOST in the manner that they did I simply stopped listening. Along with the demise of KRTH and The Sound - and then the treatment of Rita Wilde and her lay off .... and KRTH sort of being all over the place - I simply stopped listening to all of them. I have Sirius and listen to it exclusively now ... and that includes work as well ...
I grew up listening to KHJ - BOSS Radio - back when you felt that a DJ was your friend - now its just a different animal and what used to bring me comfort is no longer there ... Yes I am aging myself - but I have always been a long time and loyal listener - it is what it is
Firing great jocks wasn't the answer. And that goes for any station with a long standing history.
If you want to respect history, what's wrong with that kind of history?
We all have to make room for the next generation.