Now, who can argue with that?
You summed up my own personal feelings pretty well here. I was born in 1995. I listen to different genres of music, but when it comes to the radio, classic hits is all I listen to. While I technically grew up with music made from the 1960’s through the 1990’s, the 1980’s is the decade of music that resonates with me the most. So the #1 preset in my car is always the local classic hits radio station.I'm going to ask you to remember a lot of similar discussions we've had here, Patrick. I know you can connect those with what I am going to say.
It is a fact, proven by the ratings in many markets, that 80's-based Classic Hits draws a significant number of listeners younger than what is expected of the format. My own "liner reader" Gene Knight experienced it first hand at his last on-air gig at KXSN (Sunny 98.1) in San Diego; he noticed that contest winners sounded considerably younger than the Boomers that were "supposed to be" the core demographic. So he started asking them why they listened, and the answers were all along the same line of thinking:
"The 80's is when all the good music came out."
Without going into detail again, you will remember the discussions about how CHR started to fragment into sub-formats by genre ... mainstream, rock, rhythmic, etc. That has given every Classic Hits PD a colossal headache in terms of which genre of 90's music can be integrated into the mix without turning listeners away every other song. (Remember, Classic Hits is defined as a mass appeal "consensus hits" format.)
A listener whose CHR choice of stations played "Vogue" is, most likely, going to be turned off by "Policy of Truth", "Smells Like Teen Spirit" or "Gangsta's Paradise" ... and vice versa. But the 80's was the last decade where all the genres co-existed.
So those of us whose CHR listening pretty much came to an end with that fragmentation find the mix on KRTH unpalatable.
Just looked at the music logs, having not listened in a while and is it just me, or are Jack and KRTH looking uncomfortably close these days?
4:00 pm hour today:
KRTH: Bananarama-Cruel Summer/JACK: Fleetwood Mac-Dreams
KRTH: Elton John-Bennie and the Jets/JACK: Spin Doctors-Two Princes
KRTH: Billy Idol-Rebel Yell/JACK: Dramarama-Anything, Anything
KRTH: Phil Collins-In The Air Tonight/JACK: Nena-99 Luftballons
KRTH: Goo Goo Dolls-Iris/JACK: Killers-When You Were Young
KRTH: Soft Cell-Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go/JACK: Alanis Morisette-You Oughta Know
KRTH: Spandau Ballet-True/JACK: Beastie Boys-Fight For Your Right (To Party)
KRTH: Fleetwood Mac-Go Your Own Way/JACK:No Doubt-Underneath It All
KRTH: Human League-Don't You Want Me/JACK:Cheap Trick-I Want You To Want Me
KRTH: Pat Benatar-Love Is A Battlefield/JACK: Eurythmics-Sweet Dreams
I have a question about how it's determined when a song is dropped out of power rotation down to secondary. Is there music research done, looking up Mediabase airplays, or does that list even change?Since Mike posted that list, I thought it might be of interest for me to note songs that I'm playing on KRKE.
Red are powers, green are secondaries, blue are the New Wave accent and Flashback Weekend library.
What I found interesting in doing that was that both stations seem to diverge from the 80's at about the same point in the hour.
.JACK still strikes me as more KROQ and KRTH more KIIS. And if one's where the audience goes when there's a commercial break on the other or just a desire for something a little different, that's probably smart programming on Audacy's part.
I have a question about how it's determined when a song is dropped out of power rotation down to secondary. Is there music research done, looking up Mediabase airplays, or does that list even change?
That’s basically how I treat Jack. It’s basically just a backup (with a music selection that is decent but not really what I’m looking for).4:00 pm hour today:
KRTH: Bananarama-Cruel Summer/JACK: Fleetwood Mac-Dreams
KRTH: Elton John-Bennie and the Jets/JACK: Spin Doctors-Two Princes
KRTH: Billy Idol-Rebel Yell/JACK: Dramarama-Anything, Anything
KRTH: Phil Collins-In The Air Tonight/JACK: Nena-99 Luftballons
KRTH: Goo Goo Dolls-Iris/JACK: Killers-When You Were Young
KRTH: Soft Cell-Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go/JACK: Alanis Morisette-You Oughta Know
KRTH: Spandau Ballet-True/JACK: Beastie Boys-Fight For Your Right (To Party)
KRTH: Fleetwood Mac-Go Your Own Way/JACK:No Doubt-Underneath It All
KRTH: Human League-Don't You Want Me/JACK:Cheap Trick-I Want You To Want Me
KRTH: Pat Benatar-Love Is A Battlefield/JACK: Eurythmics-Sweet Dreams
Eh...JACK still strikes me as more KROQ and KRTH more KIIS. And if one's where the audience goes when there's a commercial break on the other or just a desire for something a little different, that's probably smart programming on Audacy's part.
I'm going to ask you to remember a lot of similar discussions we've had here, Patrick. I know you can connect those with what I am going to say.
It is a fact, proven by the ratings in many markets, that 80's-based Classic Hits draws a significant number of listeners younger than what is expected of the format. My own "liner reader" Gene Knight experienced it first hand at his last on-air gig at KXSN (Sunny 98.1) in San Diego; he noticed that contest winners sounded considerably younger than the Boomers that were "supposed to be" the core demographic. So he started asking them why they listened, and the answers were all along the same line of thinking:
"The 80's is when all the good music came out."
Without going into detail again, you will remember the discussions about how CHR started to fragment into sub-formats by genre ... mainstream, rock, rhythmic, etc. That has given every Classic Hits PD a colossal headache in terms of which genre of 90's music can be integrated into the mix without turning listeners away every other song. (Remember, Classic Hits is defined as a mass appeal "consensus hits" format.)
A listener whose CHR choice of stations played "Vogue" is, most likely, going to be turned off by "Policy of Truth", "Smells Like Teen Spirit" or "Gangsta's Paradise" ... and vice versa. But the 80's was the last decade where all the genres co-existed.
So those of us whose CHR listening pretty much came to an end with that fragmentation find the mix on KRTH unpalatable.
Unless they want to reach listeners who went the Rhythmic CHR route in the '90s when the great CHR schism developed. While the music may have had its strongest appeal to blacks and Latinos living in urban areas, its reach broadened with each passing year as grunge and emo -- the dominant rock styles heading into the new millennium -- drove suburban white CHR listeners to more rhythmic genres, be it the beat-driven danceability of rhythmic pop and r&b or the pounding, throbbing immediacy of hip-hop. In 2025, those listeners aren't going to want their classic hits stations to reflect the music they had rejected on rock-leaning CHR stations in the '90s.One other thing to keep in mind (though most won't want to admit it). The 1980s was the last decade in which the majority of songs that reached the top of the Billboard hot 100 were by white artists working either as solo acts or in groups. During the 1990s, particularly after the institution of SoundScan in December of 1991, the majority of artists reaching the top of the Billboard hot 100 had dark skins.
I know that shouldn't matter but it does to a whole lot of people. My guess, from what I'm hearing, is that program directors of classic hits stations, when they look for what to play from the 1990s, will use other charts instead of Billboard to pick the songs they will test and play.
One other thing to keep in mind (though most won't want to admit it). The 1980s was the last decade in which the majority of songs that reached the top of the Billboard hot 100 were by white artists working either as solo acts or in groups. During the 1990s, particularly after the institution of SoundScan in December of 1991, the majority of artists reaching the top of the Billboard hot 100 had dark skins.
I know that shouldn't matter but it does to a whole lot of people. My guess, from what I'm hearing, is that program directors of classic hits stations, when they look for what to play from the 1990s, will use other charts instead of Billboard to pick the songs they will test and play.



And while we're doing the playlist thing, here's KIIS this week in 1989 (just as today's 50 year old was getting ready for his/her/their freshman year in high school:
View attachment 9992
And from this week in 1993, a couple months after graduating high school:
View attachment 9993
Ted, let me know if your software can't read the text within the images. I'll be happy to break it out. Short version, even the oldest person KRTH is aiming for came up at a time when CHR had stopped being segregated, at least in L.A., and, from experience, I can say that even in 2% Black Phoenix, where you and I both lived in those years, the playlists at KZZP, Y95 and the pre-hip-hop Power 92 weren't a lot different.
One other thing to keep in mind (though most won't want to admit it). The 1980s was the last decade in which the majority of songs that reached the top of the Billboard hot 100 were by white artists working either as solo acts or in groups. During the 1990s, particularly after the institution of SoundScan in December of 1991, the majority of artists reaching the top of the Billboard hot 100 had dark skins.
I know that shouldn't matter but it does to a whole lot of people. My guess, from what I'm hearing, is that program directors of classic hits stations, when they look for what to play from the 1990s, will use other charts instead of Billboard to pick the songs they will test and play.
Good point here regarding the hits. I listen to AT40 from the 80’s every weekend. Many of the tracks that end up in the top 10 are not songs you hear very often on the radio today. There was one a few weeks ago that made it to the top that was part of a movie soundtrack. But it’s certainly not a song that would land well today.If a Classic Hits PD is smart and knows how to use research, they will follow the "prime directive" of the format, which is to play whatever songs are the consensus favorites in their target demo, regardless of artist ethnicity.
Songs that were popular as currents are not necessarily the biggest hits as gold. What you suggest is a little dangerous because of that, although those stations doing their own audience response research should seek out a variety of genres and ethnicities when choosing songs to test for possible addition to their libraries.
Remember, a CH station that plays too many marginal records risks alienating the audience, who want to hear their favorites, regardless of the factors you are concerned with.
BUT...that "racial schism" is from the point of view (largely) of whites who were approaching the end of the demo for CHR anyway.
A lot of calendar pages have been ripped (now there's an outdated reference) since then.
Context time again:
Today's 50 year old: Born 1975, entered high school 1989, graduated high school 1993, graduated college 1997.
That's the upper end of what KRTH is aiming for. And Snoop's "Gin and Juice" is still in their musical vocabulary.
There may have been some people of that era who listened to lily-white "mainstream" CHRs, but they're really unlikely to be living in L.A. today.
Also---some of us, pushing 70 now----were really happy when CHR stopped being so damn white, because the Top 40 we grew up with wasn't:
(tympani roll; Bill Drake voiceover: "55 Years Ago Today")
View attachment 9991
Eleven of the songs on that Boss 30 are from Black artists (I'm counting "Spill the Wine" because, as we'd learn as the 70s went on, that was a War record that Eric Burdon did a rap/narration/whatever that was...over).
I've read before that Los Angeles was the best city for black music on top 40 outside the Southern markets and KHJ playlists always reflected this.