I just looked at the weekend results 25-54 for KRTH ... August was their worst month share and wise of 2009 on the weekend. What hurt them most was a decline in TSL
scooty430 said:
I agree with every single point you're making here. Dead on. In particular, I agree that KRTH of 2000 was torture, and what we have now is better in so many ways.
Except....(always has to be an except, right...) KRTH HAS, in the last two years, toyed with WCBS style programming. They did a Top 1001 that covered 50s to 80s, complete with "Good Timing," "Chantilly Lace," and "Don't Be Cruel." They did a week long A to Z, then a Z to A with REALLY deep cuts, some I'd never heard before, anywhere.
The creative programming stopped for awhile, but then all of August they did Lost Hits Weekends. So my point is that even conservative Jhani Kaye is open to new approaches. So it's not a lost cause to have a great oldies station here; heck we SHOULD have one: this is the music capital of the country.
justpassingthough said:If I remember correctly, don't most music surveys prove, regardless of your generation, that your music tastes are cemented around the age of 17, what was popular at the time and rarely change?
If so, to reach the very top of the 25-54 salable demo, you should limit many songs older than 1972. Also, technically, you should include songs as recent as 2001- if you really are trying to go full demo.
If KRTH is primarily a 35 to 45 year old demo based station, then most of the music should be even more recent- 70s and 80s music, which somewhat explains why Jack is excelling while KRTH is on a downtrend.
justpassingthough said:If I remember correctly, don't most music surveys prove, regardless of your generation, that your music tastes are cemented around the age of 17, what was popular at the time and rarely change?
If so, to reach the very top of the 25-54 salable demo, you should limit many songs older than 1972. Also, technically, you should include songs as recent as 2001- if you really are trying to go full demo.
If KRTH is primarily a 35 to 45 year old demo based station, then most of the music should be even more recent- 70s and 80s music, which somewhat explains why Jack is excelling while KRTH is on a downtrend.
DavidEduardo said:calguy said:So here's what I know. KRTH is doing well in the ARB/PPM.
Not really... since late last year, they have fallen from well inside the top 5 in 25-54 to well outside the top 10... a very costly loss that is not just one book, but a general trending over 8 or 9 books.
Something is obviously wrong. Too broad, too female, and too many increased plays on out of demo songs.
calguy said:scooty430 said:
I agree with every single point you're making here. Dead on. In particular, I agree that KRTH of 2000 was torture, and what we have now is better in so many ways.
Except....(always has to be an except, right...) KRTH HAS, in the last two years, toyed with WCBS style programming. They did a Top 1001 that covered 50s to 80s, complete with "Good Timing," "Chantilly Lace," and "Don't Be Cruel." They did a week long A to Z, then a Z to A with REALLY deep cuts, some I'd never heard before, anywhere.
The creative programming stopped for awhile, but then all of August they did Lost Hits Weekends. So my point is that even conservative Jhani Kaye is open to new approaches. So it's not a lost cause to have a great oldies station here; heck we SHOULD have one: this is the music capital of the country.
Yes there is always a "but" or "except" and I hear you, but I think what you're asking for is just not going to happen. You may as well be asking for peace in the Middle East. I still hear more creativity at KRTH than most stations in LA even think about when it comes to promotions and specialty weekends & such. Since Kaye's arrival KRTH has done more of those weekends than I can remember and I thought more than one have been a bit of a stretch. Guess you can keep hoping, but I wouldn't hold my breath. Sometimes you just have to be thankful for what you've got and in this case it's been a vast improvement over what it was...
justpassingthough said:If I remember correctly, don't most music surveys prove, regardless of your generation, that your music tastes are cemented around the age of 17, what was popular at the time and rarely change?
If so, to reach the very top of the 25-54 salable demo, you should limit many songs older than 1972. Also, technically, you should include songs as recent as 2001- if you really are trying to go full demo.
If KRTH is primarily a 35 to 45 year old demo based station, then most of the music should be even more recent- 70s and 80s music, which somewhat explains why Jack is excelling while KRTH is on a downtrend.
scooty430 said:I don't have access to the "demo" ratings, but I do notice that after one gets past KIIS in the 12+, many of the stations are separated by very little difference.
So is there really a big difference between #5 and #10? With the tiny sample size of PPM, it could be just two or three actual humans determining the difference between slot #5 and slot #10.
scooty430 said:If I owned it, I'd try, not to turn it into a 70s/80s station (too much competition),
but accept an older demo
and at the same time try to turn on younger people to the amazing music of the 50s-70s.
It truly is better music.
Heck, there's probably more 15 year old Beatles fans now than ever before.
I'd also look for people who want to sell things to families, older people.... Think outside of the box.
There are plenty of Viagra pills,
life insurance policies,
Geritol bottles,
DavidEduardo said:scooty430 said:I don't have access to the "demo" ratings, but I do notice that after one gets past KIIS in the 12+, many of the stations are separated by very little difference.
Every table is a "demo" including 12+ or 6+. The difference is that the adult demos are of value, and not given away like the 12+ and 6+ numbers. In 25-54, the #1 is Jack, and the separation from KRTH is about 2 full points...
So is there really a big difference between #5 and #10? With the tiny sample size of PPM, it could be just two or three actual humans determining the difference between slot #5 and slot #10.
KRTH was early this year... I think it was in February, with around a 5 share... they are now in the 3.5 range. That is way more than a couple of meters.
And, by the way, there are over 3000 meters in LA. For KRTH to have consistently cumed around 2.5 million in 12+, there were around 700 meters that registered one quarter hour or more for that station... a very great difference from "two or three actual humans."
What happened is that KRTH did not lose cume, its listeners listen less than they used to, which is a sign of dissatisfaction.
justpassingthough said:If I remember correctly, don't most music surveys prove, regardless of your generation, that your music tastes are cemented around the age of 17, what was popular at the time and rarely change?
If so, to reach the very top of the 25-54 salable demo, you should limit many songs older than 1972. Also, technically, you should include songs as recent as 2001- if you really are trying to go full demo.
If KRTH is primarily a 35 to 45 year old demo based station, then most of the music should be even more recent- 70s and 80s music, which somewhat explains why Jack is excelling while KRTH is on a downtrend.
scooty430 said:Not sure where you got the 3000 number
Let's assume a few hundred of those are on vacation / not using the meters properly / forgetting to wear meters.
Then, how many of them tuned in KRTH enough to register on the cume, but aren't really regular listeners? Subtract them.
Now, how many of those remaining are in the demo you're talking about? The "money demo?"
It's definitely not 700 anymore. 300? 200? 100? And now you see how a few people can have a big impact. Indeed, ONE GUY in another market who was busted for faking his PPM changed the ratings in a major way, as you probably heard.
Many people in the industry are questioning PPM, and you know it. Mostly around sample size.
scooty430 said:Here is my short theory:
KRTH introduced a whole bunch of fairly exciting late 70s tunes a couple years back. Night Fever, I Wish, Don't Stop Till You Get Enough, Brother Louie, Dancing Queen, I Can't Go For That.... The station sounded pretty fresh, and those tunes were not getting airplay elsewhere.
Now it's a couple years later. Those songs are getting stale, and some are being played on KOST or whatnot. Things are getting boring again, like the 60s did under Jay Coffey.
To make matters worse, the 60s stuff is even more burned out. How many times can you stand Light My Fire, Think, Brown Eyed Girl, and Baby Love.
They need to mix it up with different songs from lots of eras, the way CBS-FM, the more successful station, is doing. Boredom is the #1 problem.
scooty430 said:Today's kids and young adults like everything from Kanye West to Third Eye Blind to Led Zeppelin to Sinatra. It's about the music's quality, not just the year it was made. Which is why millions of people under 30 are pretending to be Paul McCartney on bass this week after buying Rock Band.
scooty430 said:calguy said:
Yes there is always a "but" or "except" and I hear you, but I think what you're asking for is just not going to happen. You may as well be asking for peace in the Middle East. I still hear more creativity at KRTH than most stations in LA even think about when it comes to promotions and specialty weekends & such. Since Kaye's arrival KRTH has done more of those weekends than I can remember and I thought more than one have been a bit of a stretch. Guess you can keep hoping, but I wouldn't hold my breath. Sometimes you just have to be thankful for what you've got and in this case it's been a vast improvement over what it was...
Agreed, and I've also heard that unlike his predecessor, Kaye is a real professional to work for.
I'm impressed, actually, with how well Kaye has maintained the "sound" of KRTH. His late 70s and 80s adds have been amazingly on-target. It takes a talent to pick and choose just the right tunes that will still sound KRTH-ish. One could actually CBS-FM for sounding a bit unfocused with Madonna next to Chuck Berry.
I do, though, feel he could get that "KRTH sound" with a larger number of songs. In particular, he relies on the same older songs. I think he's better with the 70s and 80s stuff than the 60s - probably because he came from KOST. His approach to 60s seems to be "play the regular faves only." I hope he keep pushing back to the early 60s and late 50s while expanding to the 80s. (What CBS does.)
In the meantime.....Retro 1260. Great old tunes in your car, and in my case, the old Art Deco bakelite AM radio on the mantle that usually is just decorative....
justpassingthough said:If I remember correctly, don't most music surveys prove, regardless of your generation, that your music tastes are cemented around the age of 17, what was popular at the time and rarely change?
If so, to reach the very top of the 25-54 salable demo, you should limit many songs older than 1972. Also, technically, you should include songs as recent as 2001- if you really are trying to go full demo.
If KRTH is primarily a 35 to 45 year old demo based station, then most of the music should be even more recent- 70s and 80s music, which somewhat explains why Jack is excelling while KRTH is on a downtrend.