Totally. I mean, how is creepy voice dude gonna say "Now back to Philly's relaxing favorites" right before "Firework" by Katy Perry starts? I wonder how many people in the listening area strap on their sleep masks every night and drift off to the dulcet tones of "Only Girl (In the World)" by Rihanna.I streamed 106.1 last night and heard Maroon 5, Heart, Alanis Morissette, Carrie Underwood, Rick Astley, and Gotye.
Not knocking what they have to do, but the liners sounded kinda mis-fitting for this type of format.
There's nothing more relaxing than listening to a (loud) country pop-rock song about vandalizing and destroying a car of an unfaithful lover!I streamed 106.1 last night and heard Maroon 5, Heart, Alanis Morissette, Carrie Underwood, Rick Astley, and Gotye.
Not knocking what they have to do, but the liners sounded kinda mis-fitting for this type of format.
Also, it's possible we're all overthinking this. The Breeze might be on 106.1 simply because it's cheaper to run than what they had on there before; they might be selling it strictly as a package deal with others of their stations; and outside of that, they might be thinking about WISX a lot less than we are.
Perhaps relaxing means different things to different people. I find nothing non-relaxing about Firework.
I’m a fluke because I’ll take every one of those artists. Regardless, if you don’t want as too heavy an audience, then you do what you gotta do.
Not always, considering that R Kelly vanished from the radio. Plus, Ignition is no longer a staple for gatherings.Because radio is a song medium, not an artist medium. Listeners of AC radio don't care about who's singing, as much as they do about the song. So if the song fits the format, play it, regardless of the artist.
And a soft AC (or even a gold-heavy AC like WDUV) wouldn't be receptive towards teen pop made after 2002.
Give them a few years. Backstreet Boys had several AC hits, and at some point, you'll hear One Direction.
At the risk of being overly blunt, who cares/how is it relevant what AC stations boasted back in the day? We aren’t back in the day.
I would probably have counted as an Eagle 106 P1 back in the day, pre-Lander at least. Most adult hits stations I’ve heard, the Jacks and their cousins, pretty much work for me today. Now, if you pretty much recreated Eagle, or Hot Hits before it, exactly as it sounded? Nah. Maybe as a novelty I’d give it a whirl for a day. But time marches on. Some songs I enjoyed back then would be a hard no today. Some go the other direction. And with a life spanning a longer time, I like a wider variety.I agree. The way songs were received upon their release could maybe matter if some station was trying to clone a particular station in order to reach the particular audience of that station at that particular point in time. (For instance, if someone wanted to right now create an Adult Hits station to reach only the people who were Eagle 106 P1's, it would matter how that audience reacted at that time to "Cherry Pie" by Warrant and "Let the Beat Hit 'Em" by Lisa Lisa.) But that's not a station anyone would create. It's obviously too limiting. One would have to look at how their intended audience reacts today to the songs in the library. That's what testing is for. No one creating a library in 2021 would care how any songs tested in 1989. (That mentality may, in fact, be what's behind the "creating one's own playlist" vs. "that's not what radio is for" undercurrent of late.)
There's a Classic Hits station down in Tampa that was using a bunch of '80s imaging. Not all from the same package but all very recognizable '80s Top 40 jingles. I thought that was a pretty clever because they were creating a nostalgic feeling for the audience they were trying to reach without having to mess with the music library.