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Something strange about 99.5 kiss and 97Rock

T

tony78201

Guest
Hello everyone, long time lurker here, but had to register to ask a question. I have noticed that 97 rock and kiss tend to play the same song almost at the same time. when I first noticed, I thought no big deal, but it happens alot now. why do you think this is?
 
tony78201 said:
Hello everyone, long time lurker here, but had to register to ask a question. I have noticed that 97 rock and kiss tend to play the same song almost at the same time. when I first noticed, I thought no big deal, but it happens alot now. why do you think this is?
I wouldn't be surprised if this happened often. They have the exact same playlist.
 
MINDonDAradio247 said:
That happens a lot in any market where two stations are the same format.

And use the same music rotation software
 
quote- have noticed that 97 rock and kiss tend to play the same song almost at the same time. when I first noticed, I thought no big deal, but it happens alot now. why do you think this is?

Ahh yes ! Brilliant approach. Confuse the listener. Oldest trick in the book.
 
Regarding your playlist software, is that the reason why KZEP and Tragic 105.3 play the same few tired songs from artists, who usually have several just as great songs on the same album? I am not in the radio business, so pardon my ignorance, but I do know that stations, like clubs, have to purchase catalogs from recording companies. How do these catalogs work? Do they only contain a certain number of 'approved' songs from each artist or the entire album,(or CD or whatever they are called now)? As I mentioned previously, there are sometimes a few other songs on the album, besides 'the hit' that gets worn out. These songs never get aired, unless the station plays the entire album late at night, like KZEP. In my experience and opinion, some of these 'non-hits' are much better than 'the hit' that was selected to be 'the hit'. And just who decides and selects those 'hits', usually even before they are even aired, similar to all those one episode sit-coms that come out in the fall, claiming to be 'a hit with audiences', only never to be seen again? How can it already be 'a hit with audiences' if it hasn't even aired yet? Anyway, what happens when a listener calls in a request for one of these 'non-hits'? I think that free, over the air, analog radio would be much more enjoyable, listenable and maybe even profitable, if they played more variety, in their respective formats, instead of relying on the corporate, cookie-cutter, one size fits all, bean-rationing selections with the arrogant business philosophy 'that they'll have to listen and have to like whatever we decide play!'
 
You are entitled to your opinion on music. But radio stations as a MASS MEDIA need to do more than play what we like. In the early days stations played what the owner wanted to hear and that took the station just so far especially if the owner didn't reflect community tastes. Today stations need appeal to the tastes of the masses in order to gather the audience they need to sell to advertisers. For that reason the stations gravitate to popular music.

The days of ''freeform'' album rock radio are long gone. When you pay millions of dollars for a radio station you really can't gamble that investment on experimenting on the air.
 
Willis1000 said:
The days of ''freeform'' album rock radio are long gone. When you pay millions of dollars for a radio station you really can't gamble that investment on experimenting on the air.

And folks, that's as good an epitaph as any for any creativity on commercial radio in these United States.

R.I.P.
 
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