scooty430 said:I know you're getting your data from some kind of program or database,
MediaBase, one of the services stations and record indiustry use to see airplay, monitors with actual radios in each market about 2000 stations 24/7. The audio is fed to computers which use very highly perfected software to compare each song with a fingerprint previously established for nearly every song that might be played in the US. When it gets a match, the song is recorded with a datestamp and station identifier.
Subscribers can see every song played for the last 10 years on monitored stations in a variety of sorts, by station by song, by artist, etc. It is very rare to find a missing song. The data is so exact that many of us use MediaBase to verify that our music logs are playing as desired and that our weekly rotation goals are being met.
but it just doesn't match what's on the air.
Actually, it matches, for most stations, 100%. Day in, day out. Hour by hour, day by day.
There are plenty of great old songs that may not score super high on some rating chart (which probably favors familiarity more than how much you'd like it) but are still good tunes.
There are no rating charts (whatever you mean by that). What does exist are music tests, that show both playable songs and the ones that will do lots of damage.
Familiarity and like are the two elements stations look for. We stay away from unfamiliar songs in all library based formats because if the song is not familiar it is not a hit today and we gain nothing playing a forgotten, un-favorite song.
Besides, LA oldies fans can't tune out anyway. They have no choice - there are no other oldies stations around. They could still play "Dancing Queen" and "Brown Eyed Girl" for the other seven or eight songs per hour to satisfy those who want the familiar, yet keep it from being so stale with more v-a-r-i-e-t-y.
The average listener uses at least three main stations. All that happens is the oldies listener spends more time with the others.
(And don't you dare say variety means heavy repetition!)
The perception of variety is 100% based on playing only songs each listener likes a lot, and few or no songs they don't like. Variety perception nearly 100% of the time increases as the playlist is shortened to contain higher scoring songs only.
I have beaten so many stations that thought variety was "a few more songs" than I can even count any more.