MarcB said:I was at a dance club last night in Wolcott, Connecticut. They play a wide variety of music... Of course they also played some real clunkers too...
They played your old "Jay Clark" shows? ;D
MarcB said:I was at a dance club last night in Wolcott, Connecticut. They play a wide variety of music... Of course they also played some real clunkers too...
RADIO TRUTH said:There will be no live djs on any radio station by 2020, not that there are any live djs on the air presently. There is a good chance that all the music stations will be gone. All local programming will be gone. All programming will be national and syndicated to babysit local broadcast facilities. Finally, in 2020 there will be a bunch of radio groupies on this board sucking
up to the automation systems that will be running the local radio stations.
DavidEduardo said:This is a common misconception. In part, it is caused by the PPM measuring the hearing of stations not selected by the listener... such as kids showing up as listeners to WCBS-FM. And, in part, this is due to a very few younger persons actually liking such music... they are so few in number that they stand out.
oldies76 said:It is not a misconception, it's reality...many young demos really like the older songs, whether it be the late 60's, the 70's or the 80's. Sure the numbers are not even remotely close to the 40+, but if it's even 1 out of every 20 young folks, pre 30's, then you are looking at roughly 5% of this demographic, listening to older songs from the 80's or older. Geez, there someone at my work that's in her 20's and absolutely loves the 80's music.
oldies76 said:It is not a misconception, it's reality...many young demos really like the older songs, whether it be the late 60's, the 70's or the 80's. Sure the numbers are not even remotely close to the 40+, but if it's even 1 out of every 20 young folks, pre 30's, then you are looking at roughly 5% of this demographic, listening to older songs from the 80's or older. Geez, there someone at my work that's in her 20's and absolutely loves the 80's music.
Young demos might like older music, but they would not exactly be drawn in by a classic hits station because they would only like a few songs on the station. They would still listen to CHR, Hip-Hop, Alternative etc.oldies76 said:It is not a misconception, it's reality...many young demos really like the older songs, whether it be the late 60's, the 70's or the 80's. Sure the numbers are not even remotely close to the 40+, but if it's even 1 out of every 20 young folks, pre 30's, then you are looking at roughly 5% of this demographic, listening to older songs from the 80's or older. Geez, there someone at my work that's in her 20's and absolutely loves the 80's music.
Not every young adult, likes today's music. That's a proven fact.
We've been through this before, going back to the older KRTH and WCBS threads. I'd really wish you'd finally understand.
radiojomo said:Don't you remember driving with your parents listening to the radio station you absolutely hated because they music they played was bad?
MarcB said:1. PARTY 87 will cease broadcasting when they mandate all LPTV stations to go all digital in 2 years.
2. The Pirate Stations will continue to thrive and only get worse.
3. Air America will finally go under.
4. Due to listener protests of the poor signal of WQXR, WNYC Radio does a swap with Family Radio. WNYC gets 94.7 for WQXR. Family Radio gets 105.9 for WFME.
5. Nick Cannon will fail as morning man on NOW 92.3 FM. He will be succeeded by Pamela Anderson (failure), Jessica Simpson (failure), and finally settle on picking up a syndicated morning show.
KDM 7000 said:And, this whole sound that everyone today thinks is futuristic, ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNLbZaP6n5s ) will start to become the new old school booty bass, house, and freestyle of this younger generation, as yet again, another new sound and trend in music will take over in 2020 +.