ChannelFlipper said:That is definitely what they should be doing, but often times new programmers are really engaged in the competition of egos. And if one is in an ego competition, standing pat with the predecessor's formula is by definition a loss.
I would not say that the "predecessor's formula" is a loss. I would say that the overall station concept that has been KRTH for decades is about through with its run in LA.
The options are a total format shift or significant reflavoring of the existing product. When you have a station that barely hits 15th in 25-54, more than moving the furniture around the room is needed.
I haven't been following the situation too closely, but it seems the new guy at KOST and KBIG may be playing the same game. I am sure Calguy can enlighten us, although in his case, it may be working.
KBIG is now fairly consistently #1 in 25-54 and KOST has been in a narrow share range at 2nd to 5th in the same demo over the last 5 months.
I have no idea if the new KRTH guy is playing the game; time will tell. It is interesting that for all of the talk about lowering the average age of the KRTH listener by essentially ditching all or nearly all of the 60's music, the first special programming event under the new PD was to play four Beatles tunes per hour for the 4th of July. I guess it doesn't make sense to play four Earth Wind and Fire songs per hour.
It's going to take more than small shifts in music to make KRTH a 25-54 contender. Doing an artist feature is a lot less work intensive than doing a whole holiday special, and if the end result is irrelevant, then we get the simple solution.