but we’re now in an age where we’re not spending as much and looking to cut down on subscriptionsIf people can hear that music without commercials, why would they want it with commercials? Do you understand my question now?
but we’re now in an age where we’re not spending as much and looking to cut down on subscriptionsIf people can hear that music without commercials, why would they want it with commercials? Do you understand my question now?
Okay, let’s put it this way. You go into a pub and in addition to the popular beer, they also sell smoothies, sno cones, coffee and freshly squeezed fruit juices. That’s what The Eagle is right now with the music they’re playing.
Def Leppard is currently touring with Journey, The Steve Miller Band, Heart and Cheap Trick. Those bands all fit on 92.5, 98.7, 100.3 and 102.1. 97.1?? Not so much!
And that’s why I love 99.5 KISSI would agree on this one. So far, their playlist is similar to 99.5 Kiss in San Antonio, playing hard rock 80s and 90s along with grunge, and early 2000s hard rock, but with the occasional newer Three Days Grace, Shinedown, and.... Jelly Roll (which Kiss SA doesn't play). Very little 2010s and today's rock is being played but then again, it may start adding the newer stuff after a while. At least I'm not hearing Twenty One Pilots or Imagine Dragons (yet and they better not). What I'm also not hearing is newer rock bands like Asking Alexandria, Bring Me the Horizon, The Pretty Reckless, or even Dirty Honey and Greta Van Fleet isn't played either, which I think separates KEGL from being active rock and would classify as mainstream rock instead.
Because I'm trying to understand how a channel on a subscription service would help a radio station make money. Would the fans of that music pay for it? Or would they be willing to sit through 14 minute commercial breaks advertising products they don't use.
If people can hear that music without commercials, why would they want it with commercials? Do you understand my question now?
Agreed. Playing it safe to get remembrance is key.It’s also notable the station hasn’t been on the air for 24 hours yet as the Eagle (again). You want to start with music that’s familiar and will get the station in people’s minds. Being too adventurous in the first weeks, let alone the first day, of the station isn’t a great way to cultivate and retain listenership. I predict the station will fine tune and adjust the music as they see appropriate after it’s been on the air for a bit. Right now, they’re smart to focus on the mass appeal hits. Tweak it and get more obscure if needed later.
The big difference is, with Sirius the music is the product that the listener is paying for. With radio, the LISTENER is the product the ADVERTISER is paying for. So, for Turbo, what are the demos they attract, and would advertisers pay for them? Once you hit 54, that answer is usually "no" because 54+ year olds are starting to spend less money, are less likely to try new products, etc.That question is valid for ALL radio stations.
So do we just turn them all off?
Last I checked, you PAY for Sirius as well.
The question isn't what do "they" want. The question is what do advertisers want. If you have a station with Top 10 ratings and no advertisers, you get WRME or KOAI, which are free music jukeboxes that make no money. Instead of using subscription channels as a model, try to find a commercial radio station that is playing what you want.It's extremely male, as should be the Eagle. If you read the comments on all of their new posts, people are already saying, "We don't want oldies and we don't want alternative." They WANT a rock station.
I don’t think that a lot of people are searching for a rock-based variety hits format.
Advertisers don't want men only. Let me say that again: An all-men station doesn't sell. You need to get their wives and girlfriends to listen as well.If you had an auditorium filled with 3000 people (MEN 25-54) and played the biggest songs from the bands I mentioned, the majority of those 3000 people would know and like the song.
WFAN? KLAC? The southern female demographic, 18-34/25-54 is being covered fine on the Eagle. Women in Dallas are different than the female demographic in Chicago, New York/New Jersey or LA. KEGL could‘ve relaunched as an all male country format, women in Dallas/southern regions would still listenAdvertisers don't want men only. Let me say that again: An all-men station doesn't sell. You need to get their wives and girlfriends to listen as well.
There's way more that goes into The Eagle than the music, as well. It needs a GREAT local morning show. It needs to be built with the right people, including myself. It needs a heritage talent on MID DAYS.
The question isn't what do "they" want. The question is what do advertisers want. If you have a station with Top 10 ratings and no advertisers, you get WRME or KOAI, which are free music jukeboxes that make no money. Instead of using subscription channels as a model, try to find a commercial radio station that is playing what you want.
Because they already have KJKK. But KJKK doesn't play a lot of other bands. This station does. That's the difference.
Don't waste your time reading facebook posts. They're not going to listen whatever you play.
Advertisers don't want men only. Let me say that again: An all-men station doesn't sell. You need to get their wives and girlfriends to listen as well.
Women in Dallas are different than the female demographic in Chicago, New York/New Jersey or LA.
See you're another guy that buys into the idea that the only people who listen to real rock are 19 year old kids with black tee shirts and pink hair. That attitude has completely destroyed the format.
I'm 53. I know AC/DC, and I'm sick to death of it. Same with Motley Crue, Def Leppard, Pink Floyd, Heart, Tom Petty, The Stones - and the list could go on and on and on.