Re: Playlist
> Dear "corporate lackey to the rescue on message board boy",
> Do they give you a bonus for this drooling. You seem to have
> a desire to defend a loser. You're probably a Cubs fan too.
Another immature attack. Can we ever have a mature, solid debate without the unnecessary remarks?
>
It is
> nothing more than small town radio.
Stop it with the "small town radio" junk. Its working in "big town radio".
> the entire concept is laughable.
This concept is creative and different. Many many people are liking it.
>
> Chicago = FAILURE, NYC = FAILURE. L.A. = In love today,
> divorced next year. In my eyes, those markets matter far
> more than a few little ones and that's all I'm interested
> in. I don't care about Nashville, Little Rock, Chatanooga,
> etc, they're meaningless to me. I'm interested in markets
> that matter. Markets I've worked in, Markets I've been
> number one in NYC, Chicago and L.A.
Indianapolis, Nashville, etc. are NOT SMALL MARKETS. You failed to mention Portland, Seattle, Philadelphia, Dallas, and some others. Not every market is Los Angeles, New York City, or Chicago, but the ones that are SLIGHTLY smaller than the big 3 are still BIG markets!
>
> The format is ridiculous and you're ridiculous for
> constantly telling people this is the variety "people" want.
Opinion, opinion, opinion! Many people don't think that this format is ridiculus. Apparently this is the variety people want.
> I hate to tell you but many 18-34 year olds have developed
> new habits, radio ain't one of them. Jack's target demo only
> has a few years left before they're out of that demo. Radio
> offers very little other than bong smoking folk music that's
> "critically acclaimed", repulsive hip hop, fried out classic
> rock or "put us on and pay no attention" formats that don't
> interest many. It's a proven fact, radio is in trouble and
> Jack ain't the answer. Radio is just old technology. It
> can't be what people want BUT there's many things out there
> that let people do, see, hear and watch what they want, when
> they want. Radio loses no matter what.
You're complaining about how radio just plays the same crap like burnt out classic rock. Jack offers something a little different and spicier, but people like you still rip it apart. Give it a chance! Nothing makes people like you happy.
You are also acting like radio is completely dead. Its not.
In general, Jack is suceeding in most markets. That statement about market sizes was crazy. You act like Nashville, Dallas, or Indianapolis for example are small towns in the middle of Kansas. Doesn't make since as to why you "wouldn't care about markets other than LA, NYC, and the Windy City."
Ugh.
>
>
>
> > Not at all. If you're as experienced as you claim, you
> know
> > as well as I listeners will come into a music test,
> > screaming for "more variety" on the radio. Yet, when you
> > get the results of the music test, their votes ALWAYS go
> for
> > a very similar, somewhat limited set of major hits. We
> all
> > test "the lunars" over and over again and listeners always
>
> > cast their votes against those songs while they keep on
> > saying "Unchained Melody".
> >
> > That all being said- there is no single radio station that
>
> > can possibly please everybody. If you want this type or
> > that type, you usually have a station to choose. Variety
> > Hits is no more than a response from a segment of radio
> > listeners who are saying, "you know, I like several
> > different kinds of music- it would be cool to have one
> > station play a much wider variety of songs I know".
> > The VH format is that- it's never claimed to be "the"
> > station for everybody.
> > Just the sizable segment that's shouting "I'm tired of the
>
> > same old/same old over and over again".
> >
> > And, by the way, stick that "party line" jazz somwehere.
> > You have no idea what you're talking about when you make
> > such cynical accusations.
> >
> > > So now you're defining variety. And you wonder why this
> > > format won't last. You can't be everyone's variety
> because
> >
> > > everyone defines it differently. You may be the wrong
> > > variety. You defining what kind of variety people want
> is
> > > too funny. Is that the party line you're reciting. "Tell
>
> > > people what kind of variety they want so they'll think
> > that
> > > way".
> >
>