Dave Pratt said:Might be "alive" if cpr counts. As for "well"? That's overly optimistic.....
johndavis said:As for the youth, are any of us surprised that after two decades or more of stations ignoring anyone under the age of 25 that they've given up on radio? I think I'm too old to know how to get that audience back.
KOHS said:johndavis said:As for the youth, are any of us surprised that after two decades or more of stations ignoring anyone under the age of 25 that they've given up on radio? I think I'm too old to know how to get that audience back.
Back in 1988 (yes, I'm dating myself), my high school station was one of the first FM's to start playing alternative music. It was all the rage back in the day and we helped a local FM station switch from Top 40 to Oldies. ;D The PD claimed our station had nothing to do with the switch, we knew our station was a factor in that move. Today, that same station (X96) has morphed into one of the most successful alternative stations in the nation (IMHO).
With so many other choices out there (portable MP3 players, XM/Sirius, internet radio, etc.), I am not sure anyone can win the youth back to radio. Playing more music is definitely a step in the right direction, but I'm not sure radio can recover and survive the economic downturn. I hope I am wrong, but I don't think I am.
johndavis said:Sticking a radio inside of an iPod isn't the answer. Teens don't listen to it because it's an iPod, they listen to it because it has what they want.
johndavis said:Sticking a radio inside of an iPod isn't the answer. Teens don't listen to it because it's an iPod, they listen to it because it has what they want.
I think some of the music industry's issues dovetail with radio's issues with attracting young adults. Instead of trying to blackmail radio into paying them royalties, maybe the two should learn to work together. Record companies are having a hard time staying relevant, too. The days of sending indie promoters out with hookers & blow to get adds are gone and they're never coming back.
Ford said:Seriously though, the solution is to give teens something they can't get on their iPod.