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Phoenix Arbitron Radio Ratings: May 2012

oldiesfan6479 said:
Why is buying a new rig a "vioation of all kinds of rules"? As long as you tell
Uncle Charlie "Harris out...Nautel in," what's the problem?

Because as a rule, a business generally doesn't sink that much capital into a product that will never cover the expense.
 
Oh, KYOT! Dropped .2 points for the second straight book. :( Lowest rated FM in the CC portfolio! Anybody else calling for a flip by the end of the year, because I can smell it coming!
 
RBRadioWaves said:
Oh, KYOT! Dropped .2 points for the second straight book. :( Lowest rated FM in the CC portfolio! Anybody else calling for a flip by the end of the year, because I can smell it coming!

Maybe they should have listened to their former listeners before the unwise decision to flip.
 
Wha wh wh, whaa... Sorry, I'm a little nervous, but... but but what else is there for KYOT to flip to? Maybe they could put KFYI on there then I can enjoy (the good) Coast To Coast AM shows at night!

Right?

Or maybe they could go alternative? Not likely, but just thought I'd say it for fun..





...cuz I'm a fun guy.
 
KDM 7000 said:
Or maybe they could go alternative? Not likely, but just thought I'd say it for fun..

Could be quite likely :)

Alternative Rock Station Ratings
Dec. 2011 or recent ratings period -

Denver: 5.1 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Philadelphia: 5.0 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Salt Lake: 4.1
Washington DC: 3.9 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Austin: 3.9
Providence: 3.5
Kansas City: 3.3
Dallas: 3.2 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Milwaukee: 3.0

The only question is, in a market with so many rock stations already (KUPD, KDKB, KSLX) would an alt. rocker on a full signal be more profitable than rhythmic oldies currently is.

Either that or 103.9 flip back to what they were doing during the time it was called "The Edge".

KYOT flipped to Rhythmic Oldies before 103.9 flipped from Classic-based Alternative to AC or whatever.

AAA is the only other music format "hole" I can think of but that would seem less likely than alt.

Obviously at some point Sports and more News on FM is probably likely given the trends nationwide.
 
Saladressing said:
KDM 7000 said:
Or maybe they could go alternative? Not likely, but just thought I'd say it for fun..

Could be quite likely :)

Alternative Rock Station Ratings
Dec. 2011 or recent ratings period -

Denver: 5.1 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Philadelphia: 5.0 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Salt Lake: 4.1
Washington DC: 3.9 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Austin: 3.9
Providence: 3.5
Kansas City: 3.3
Dallas: 3.2 (Owned by Clear Channel)
Milwaukee: 3.0

The only question is, in a market with so many rock stations already (KUPD, KDKB, KSLX) would an alt. rocker on a full signal be more profitable than rhythmic oldies currently is.

Either that or 103.9 flip back to what they were doing during the time it was called "The Edge".

KYOT flipped to Rhythmic Oldies before 103.9 flipped from Classic-based Alternative to AC or whatever.

AAA is the only other music format "hole" I can think of but that would seem less likely than alt.

Obviously at some point Sports and more News on FM is probably likely given the trends nationwide.

Outside of Dallas and Austin, all of those markets are predominantly anglo and those stations all have full signals. Alternative has gone from 90 stations on the panel to 55.

Milwaukee's 3.0 is the lowest share of any FM in the market. And it has a full signal and a good programmer.

DC has a huge morning show and no Active Rock competitor.
 
DavidEduardo said:
asugeorge1 said:
The Lumberyard really is the little station that could. For the last few months, KAZG has consistently gotten that 0.1 rating

Actually, it gets a 0.1 share. Its rating is 0.0.

To put that in perspective, there are about 3,571,000 million 6+ persons in the metro. Of those, at any given moment, 200 are listening to KAZG.

The PA at Home Depot has more listeners.

Not any more, the PA has gotten so lame lately, more commercials, bad music, and endless requests for cleanup in the paint aisle.

I stopped listening to Home Depot. Lowe's is so much more hip.
 
KDM 7000 said:
Wha wh wh, whaa... Sorry, I'm a little nervous, but... but but what else is there for KYOT to flip to?

I realize they have different owners so it ain't gonna happen but I'd personally love to see the Lumberyard's playlist on 95.5 as a TRUE Oldies station and not that disappointing mix that KOOL has turned into.
 
landtuna said:
I realize they have different owners so it ain't gonna happen but I'd personally love to see the Lumberyard's playlist on 95.5 as a TRUE Oldies station and not that disappointing mix that KOOL has turned into.

What's the definition of "TRUE" oldies again?

I mean I wasn't exactly thrilled when KOOL started to add lots of 70s hits, and was practically beside myself when they added 80s hits, but then again if a song from 1982 - 30 years old - isn't an "oldie," then what is?
 
Ford said:
landtuna said:
I realize they have different owners so it ain't gonna happen but I'd personally love to see the Lumberyard's playlist on 95.5 as a TRUE Oldies station and not that disappointing mix that KOOL has turned into.

What's the definition of "TRUE" oldies again?

I mean I wasn't exactly thrilled when KOOL started to add lots of 70s hits, and was practically beside myself when they added 80s hits, but then again if a song from 1982 - 30 years old - isn't an "oldie," then what is?

An Oldie isn't defined only by time. Those songs belong to the first and second generations of Rock/Pop - in calendar terms mid-1950's through early 80's excluding Disco.

KOOL is on my car radio only during long stop sets by KSLX. At home listening is KODS. I would listen to KOY-AM and KAZT-AM if their signals weren't so crappy.
 
Ford said:
What's the definition of "TRUE" oldies again?

I mean I wasn't exactly thrilled when KOOL started to add lots of 70s hits, and was practically beside myself when they added 80s hits, but then again if a song from 1982 - 30 years old - isn't an "oldie," then what is?

Internally, inside the radio and advertising businesses, "oldies" is a format name for stations that play a 60's centered pop gold format.

By the same measure, "classic hits" identifies the 70's-centered format variant.

To listeners, "oldies" means whatever a station tells them it means.
 
landtuna said:
KOOL is on my car radio only during long stop sets by KSLX. At home listening is KODS. I would listen to KOY-AM and KAZT-AM
if their signals weren't so crappy.

KODS as in "KODS Carnelian Bay/Reno weather..."?

KAZT (AM or FM)? KAZG maybe? Now don't diss the Lumberyard! ;)
 
DJ_Perry said:
landtuna said:
in calendar terms mid-1950's through early 80's excluding Disco.

Why does it exclude Disco? If you're biased about those type of oldies, that means you should also exclude Motown, Soul, or Funk. Its all related. Rod Steward had a Disco song, so did Heart and the Stones.

Remember, you asked for my opinion.....so here it is.

Disco is dance music, pure and simple. It is to Rock/Pop what Swing is. Good in its own right but not within the genre.

As far as artists having crossovers.....Elvis sang some Standards, ballads and a whole bunch of Christmas songs. Does that mean everything he did deserves to be included in Rock/Pop? Of course not. The artist does not determine the song's genre, the song does.

I do not make a distinction between Motown, Soul and funk because they pretty much all sound the same, and although I am not personally a big fan of these, I have to acknowledge Motown, in particular, was a big part of Oldies at one time.
 
oldiesfan6479 said:
landtuna said:
KOOL is on my car radio only during long stop sets by KSLX. At home listening is KODS. I would listen to KOY-AM and KAZT-AM
if their signals weren't so crappy.

KODS as in "KODS Carnelian Bay/Reno weather..."?

KAZT (AM or FM)? KAZG maybe? Now don't diss the Lumberyard! ;)

Yup.....KODS. Best Oldies station I've found on the 'Net so far.

KAZG - OOPS! Typo. The Lumberyard, of course.
 
DJ_Perry said:
Any Genre qualifies as an oldie as long as it charted well on the Mainstream charts. Devil went down to Georgia, Moondance, Green Onions, The In Crowd, and even Stayin Alive. All fall outside the Rock/Pop world, but charted with Top 40 Music = Oldie.

Disagree. Otherwise you'd also have lots of Country crossovers which were popular on T-40 radio in the late 50's and early 60's as Oldies and clearly they don't belong to that genre.

Green Onions and The In Crowd were both jazz crossovers but because they were played a lot on T-40 I would agree they belong. Stayin' Alive was a Disco crossover and its popularity on radio followed the movie soundtrack. Not really a dance song but definitely a Pop song so I agree there too. I don't remember Moondance.
 
DavidEduardo said:
Internally, inside the radio and advertising businesses, "oldies" is a format name for stations that play a 60's centered pop gold format.

Do the listeners care about the internal inside the business definition? I think not. I don't believe for a second that an average non-Radio-Info posting listener tunes into KOOL, hears "Hungry Like the Wolf" and says "hey, that doesn't fit within the 60's centered pop gold format!"
 
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