briancraig said:
Hip is such a subjective concept that I'm not sure it can be qualified that easily.
I'm sure to teens in Woodland Hills, KLOS might have been "hip" in 1974, but to kids in Baldwin Hills, KDAY would have been the "hip" station.
What would be interesting to me would be non Top 40 stations that have been #1 in teens. I know that in the one 1970s L.A. ratings book I have actually seen (Fall 1978) KMET was clearly number 1 in teens.
But I would guess that KHJ would have been number 1 in that demographic at least through 1976. When KIIS had double digit 12+ ratings in the mid 1980s, I would think they would have had to have out rated KROQ in teens.
But it does appear that L.A. teens did listen to AOR in greater numbers than in other markets. WLS was clearly the number 1 teen station in Chicago up until the early 1980s. New York teenagers seem to have also been more "top 40" oriented.
Brian: It's hard to find anything deeper than 12+ numbers...especially 30 and more years out. But a good indicator of teen trends is the 7PM-12Midnight daypart (NOTE: These are still overall audience 12+ numbers). Here's what I have from that:
Fall 1968 Pulse
1. KHJ (Top 40): 14.0
2. KGFJ (R&B): 8.0
3. KLAC (Talk): 5.0
3. KNX (News): 5.0
3. KOST-FM (Beautiful): 5.0
3. KRLA (Top 40): 5.0
The teens there are most likely listening to KHJ, KGFJ and KRLA. The only other stations that might have significant teen listening that book were KDAY, KEZY, KMET and XERB, all tied for 21st with a 1.0.
Pulse Fall 1969
1. KHJ (Top 40): 12.0
2. KBCA-FM (Jazz): 9.0
2. KGFJ (R&B): 9.0
4. KABC (Talk): 8.0
4. KRLA (Top 40): 8.0
6. KMET (AOR): 5.0
KHJ's slipping, KGFJ is up a bit, KRLA has Jimmy Rabbitt in the timeslot and he's pushing in an AOR direction and they're up three full points and KMET has five times the number it had the year before.
Pulse Fall 1970
1. KABC (Talk): 14.0
2. KBCA-FM (Jazz): 8.0
2. KGFJ (R&B): 8.0
2. KHJ (Top 40): 8.0
5. KFAC(Classical): 5.0
6. KMET (AOR): 4.0
6. KRLA(Top 40): 4.0
KHJ loses a third of its evening number and its #1 nighttime ranking, ties with KGFJ. KMET loses a point and KRLA loses half it's audience. What's new? KABC-FM's "Love" AOR format...which debuts tied for #11 with a 2.0.
Pulse Fall 1971
1. KABC (Talk): 11.0
2. KHJ (Top 40): 10.0
3. KGFJ (R&B): 6.0
3. KRLA (Top 40): 6.0
5. KJOI-FM(Beautiful): 5.0
5. KLOS-FM(AOR): 5.0
KHJ picks up a couple of points, but stays #2, KGFJ drops a couple, KRLA loses two and KLOS (the former KABC-FM) blows into the Top 5 with its new, live AOR format. KLOS knocks KMET down to a tie for 13th place with a 2.0...but that's still a 7 share listening to AOR at night on those two stations alone (factor in KPPC and KNAC and it's a 12).
Pulse Fall 1972
1. KABC (Talk): 14.0
2. KLOS-FM (AOR): 7.0
3. KRTH-FM (Oldies):6.0
4. KFI (Big Band/Country): 5.0
4. KMET-FM (AOR): 5.0
6. KBCA-FM (Jazz): 4.0
6. KKDJ-FM (Top 40): 4.0
6. KHJ (Top 40): 4.0
And here's the "Oh, crap!" moment on Melrose. KLOS #2 with a 7.0. KHJ's oldies sister's first fall book is a #3 with a 6.0. KMET rebounds to #4 with a 5.0 (that's a 12 share for AOR on two stations. Add KPPC and KNAC and it's a 16.0). And KHJ ties for 6th with an automated Top 40.
Fall 1973 Pulse
1. KKDJ-FM (Top 40): 5.1
2. KHJ (Top 40): 4.7
3. KLOS-FM (AOR): 4.4
4. KEZY (Top 40): 2.2
5. KGFJ (R&B): 2.0
6. KMET-FM (AOR): 2.0
KKDJ goes live, adds Charlie Tuna, Jay Stevens, Billy Pearl, Humble Harve and Kris Erik Stevens and runs straight to #1, KHJ climbs back to #2 but really only adds 7/10ths of a point to last year's disaster. And there's a lot of L.A. kids listening to Top 40 from Anaheim (KEZY). KLOS and KMET both go down. Total AOR share: 6.4. Way down.
Fall 1974 Pulse
1. KLOS-FM (AOR): 6.4
2. KABC (Talk): 4.2
3. KHJ (Top 40): 4.0
4. KDAY (R&B): 2.8
5. KIQQ-FM (Top 40): 2.5
6. KRTH-FM (Oldies): 2.0
KLOS rebounds nicely...all the way to #1. KHJ is 3rd and loses 7/10ths. Beaver Cleaver does okay for KIQQ. Total AOR share (KLOS, KMET, KNAC) is an 8.6.
I don't have 1975. So we skip a year and shift from Pulse to Arbitron
Fall 1976 Arbitron
1. KABC (Talk): 6.4
2. KHJ (Top 40): 6.3
3. KFI (A/C-Talk): 5.5
4. KBIG-FM (Beautiful): 5.0
4. KJOI-FM (Beautiful): 5.0
6. KLOS-FM (AOR): 4.6
Charlie Van Dyke's rescue of KHJ gives it one last good night book...though it isn't # 1 and hasn't been since Fall 1969. KLOS looks soft, but if you add it, KMET, KWST, KNAC and KROQ together, there's an 11.4 AOR share.
Fall 1977 Arbitron
1. KABC (Talk): 6.5
2. KBIG-FM (Beautiful): 6.3
3. KLOS-FM (AOR): 5.2
4. KJOI-FM (Beautiful): 4.4
5. KHJ (Top 40): 4.0
5. KRTH-FM (A/C): 4.0
7. KNX (News): 3.8
8. KMET-FM (AOR): 3.7
KLOS overtakes KHJ...which ties with the new A/C format on sister KRTH. KMET is only 3/10ths behind KHJ. There's a total 12.9 AOR share with KLOS, KMET, KWST, KROQ and KNAC.
Fall 1978 Arbitron
1. KABC (Talk): 7.7
2. KMET-FM (AOR): 6.6
3. KNX (News): 5.4
4. KBIG-FM (Beautiful): 4.5
5. KFWB (News): 3.9
6. KJOI-FM (Beautiful): 3.8
7. KHJ (Top 40): 3.4
7. KLAC (Country): 3.4
9. KLOS-FM (AOR): 3.3
And here's KMET...nearly double KHJ's number...as KHJ falls out of the Top 5 and manages to only get a tenth of a point more than the wounded KLOS. Total AOR share 12.4.
Fall 1979 Arbitron
1. KMET-FM (AOR): 8.5
2. KABC (Talk): 6.0
3. KRLA (Oldies): 5.4
4. KBIG-FM (Beautiful): 4.6
5. KNX (News): 4.5
6. KJOI-FM (Beautiful): 4.4
7. KLAC (Country): 3.7
8. KFWB (News): 3.2
9. KLOS-FM (AOR): 3.1
10.KRTH-FM (A/C): 3.0
10.KUTE-FM (Disco): 3.0
12.KIIS-FM(Disco): 2.7
13.KHJ (Top 40): 2.6
And that's all folks...KHJ's last Top 40 nighttime book. 13th with a 2.6. KMET #1 with an 8.5 all by itself. A total AOR share (KMET, KLOS and KWST) of a 13.2.
So really, AOR was a contender from '69 onward...which was KHJ's last #1 nighttime rating. And with the exception of '73 and '74 (and '75, for which we don't have numbers, AOR's nighttime share was between an 11 and a 16...usually somewhere in the 12s.