M
magicmk
Guest
> I don't look at suburban signals as losers in the city
> proper's metro, rather, I believe it's an untapped potential
> to deliver a successfully proven format on the most frugal
> of means to show how proper spent finances can take you from
> zero to hero.
>
Ding! Well said. Just because a signal is small, doesn't necessarily doom it from the start. Program it smart, spend carefully, and know who (and where) your audience is. I don't think the format necessarily has to be "successfully proven" to survive with smaller coverage - new, exciting and innovative can work too - so long as it stays that way and doesn't wear off like a fad.
Before I personally heard the Jack/variety hits format, the idea seemed crazy to me - unfocused, no musical direction. It really bucks a trend in radio programming where formats seem to be coming narrower and narrower all the time. When I first heard Nine, then Jack, I eased my opposition a bit - thinking, hey, this isn't so bad. It's been about a year now, and the novelty wore off for me quite a while ago. Personally, I can listen to each station for a couple of songs (sometimes three) till I hear something that forces me to tune to something else, and wish they'd play more 80's. I like hearing Frankie Hollywood on Nine, and I find the Jack voice guy amusing (I realize I'm likely in the minority where that's concerned), but all of the other stuff does nothing for me.
> proper's metro, rather, I believe it's an untapped potential
> to deliver a successfully proven format on the most frugal
> of means to show how proper spent finances can take you from
> zero to hero.
>
Ding! Well said. Just because a signal is small, doesn't necessarily doom it from the start. Program it smart, spend carefully, and know who (and where) your audience is. I don't think the format necessarily has to be "successfully proven" to survive with smaller coverage - new, exciting and innovative can work too - so long as it stays that way and doesn't wear off like a fad.
Before I personally heard the Jack/variety hits format, the idea seemed crazy to me - unfocused, no musical direction. It really bucks a trend in radio programming where formats seem to be coming narrower and narrower all the time. When I first heard Nine, then Jack, I eased my opposition a bit - thinking, hey, this isn't so bad. It's been about a year now, and the novelty wore off for me quite a while ago. Personally, I can listen to each station for a couple of songs (sometimes three) till I hear something that forces me to tune to something else, and wish they'd play more 80's. I like hearing Frankie Hollywood on Nine, and I find the Jack voice guy amusing (I realize I'm likely in the minority where that's concerned), but all of the other stuff does nothing for me.