Hear the Boss-93 Count Down All Day Sunday only on: http://www.reelradio.com/aircheckchannel/acplayer.php
skyrocker said:Hear the Boss-93 Count Down All Day Sunday only on: http://www.reelradio.com/aircheckchannel/acplayer.php
What give you the idea I was thinking, sir?What makes you think playing oldies that have been played to death for 40 years qualifies
DavidKaye said:Not even Baby Boomers listen to oldies anymore.
DavidKaye said:skyrocker said:Hear the Boss-93 Count Down All Day Sunday only on: http://www.reelradio.com/aircheckchannel/acplayer.php
What makes you think playing oldies that have been played to death for 40 years qualifies as "interesting"? Not even Baby Boomers listen to oldies anymore.
RadioStarOne said:Gee David ever get the idea that not everyone agree's with your opinion on what the boomer's like when it comes to oldies radio? Skyrocker has lived through nearly a lifetime of radio history and you should show a little respect for his having been a large part of that history! Rock On Skyrocker!
skyrocker said:I spend much more time KNOWING than limited THINKING. I know you would enjoy yourself much more if you spent more time away from your tiny imagined self.
DavidKaye said:RadioStarOne said:Gee David ever get the idea that not everyone agree's with your opinion on what the boomer's like when it comes to oldies radio? Skyrocker has lived through nearly a lifetime of radio history and you should show a little respect for his having been a large part of that history! Rock On Skyrocker!
Calling David Eduardo, the man with the ratings books. Oldies aren't being played much on the radio because oldies don't have listeners, even though the Bay Boom (people born between 1946 and 1964) are the dominant population. They're just not listening.
DavidEduardo said:So, boomers make many choices. Some listen to classic hits, some a lot. But most listen a little, and listen to lots of more contemporary things or to talk. And many, many, never listen at all.
DavidEduardo said:The point is that classic hits listeners are nowhere near being even 10% of the over-1-hour-a-week listeners in LA, and the format is just one component of a highly fragmented segment that only has commonality in the wide diversity of choices it makes. Listening to 40 to 50 year old songs is an option, but not a pluralistic one.
DavidEduardo said:The point is that classic hits listeners are nowhere near being even 10% of the over-1-hour-a-week listeners in LA, and the format is just one component of a highly fragmented segment that only has commonality in the wide diversity of choices it makes.
landtuna said:I don't need to remind you David that El A
My point with Mr. Kaye was simply that he made a statement that "nobody" listens to Oldies and we all know that isn't true.
DavidKaye said:I NEVER said such a thing. Look back over the thread and you'll find that "Lkeller" talked about "nobody" listening. I didn't say it.
WCBS-FM is the second highest rated radio station in New York right now (12+). K-Earth is generally in the Top 10 in Los Angeles. Despite the fact that 40 years have past since many of the Classic Hits being played were new hits - there is some life in the format left.
But to harken back to the title of this thread - these are two 'interesting' radio stations, not jut voice-tracked juke boxes. Even our dull-as-dirt 103.7 is doing better than its predecessor formats on that frequency.
This would seem to disprove the notion that "nobody" - not even baby boomers - are listening.