Thats very sad to hear!!chrocket87 said:Heck, there isn’t a single 80s song that’s been played since midnight today.
I know the feeling all to well*. If you were an 18 year old senior in High School in 1989 you would have been born around 1971 which makes you 55. The radio "money" demos stop at 55. Anything older is usually of no interest to the agency buyers.Thats very sad to hear!!
But literally every major market still plays plenty of 80s music. This seems to be an Atlanta issue. It still tests well with the audience elsewhere.I know the feeling all to well*. If you were an 18 year old senior in High School in 1989 you would have been born around 1971 which makes you 55. The radio "money" demos stop at 55. Anything older is usually of no interest to the agency buyers.
*I am way out of the money demos.
Bingo! Well, every OTHER major market. Not Atlanta!But literally every major market still plays plenty of 80s music. This seems to be an Atlanta issue. It still tests well with the audience elsewhere.
This is me to a T. Born in 1971. Graduated in 1989. Listened to the last gasps of 94Q as a senior, when it was a real CHR. I just officially crossed the "get lost" age demo for radio three weeks ago, although they haven't wanted me in years, really.I know the feeling all to well*. If you were an 18 year old senior in High School in 1989 you would have been born around 1971 which makes you 55. The radio "money" demos stop at 55. Anything older is usually of no interest to the agency buyers.
*I am way out of the money demos.
Back in 1989, WQXI-FM/WSTR PD Bill Cahill said that changing the branding was the right way of flipping format, and that if they said "we're the new 94Q," people would say, "What? Again?"This station has more lives than a cat. I can’t keep up with each musical shift before of the rhythmic AC relaunch (that then started shifting) for the life of me.
I agree. I only lasted 2 songs Saturday. Of course you have to remember just about every station I liked in Atlanta failed: WGST, Fox 97, Cool 105.7, 96 Rock, True Oldies Channel on 106.7, and all News 106.7*. If I listen, they will fail. I am the format killer in the ATL.I tuned in for a bit today. Just no. I switched to something else within 10 minutes.
I've lost count. They could go in the direction with BIG in Boston, Magic in Boston, etc but they don't.Back in 1989, WQXI-FM/WSTR PD Bill Cahill said that changing the branding was the right way of flipping format, and that if they said "we're the new 94Q," people would say, "What? Again?"
Different players now, of course, but how many "new Star 94"s have we endured?
You forgot the racial makeup of this market. Boston is 8.7% black Atlanta is 37% black.I've lost count. They could go in the direction with BIG in Boston, Magic in Boston, etc but they don't.
A true AC station can and enhance Atlanta's diverse population—including many Black listeners—without abandoning the AC format. It can be done. B98.5 wants to take the Hot AC route. Fine.You forgot the racial makeup of this market. Boston is 8.7% black Atlanta is 37% black.
The Atlanta market is considered to be younger and Blacker than average, and the actual demos bear that out to some extent.Bingo! Well, every OTHER major market. Not Atlanta!
I was out at the pool yesterday and listened to 101.1 WCBS and it was so good. Great mix, good DJs.
I am told that format won't work here. God forbid anyone actually TRIES it.
As I said before, I am 55, and I went to school in the Atlanta area. In my high school class, when we wanted to listen to something that everyone could agree on, we listened to Z93, and later, Power 99. There were elements of all types of music played there. That CHR music of the time is now today's gold-based AC. I still say it could work here if someone would just try it. And if it failed then I'd shaddap about it.Hopefully the following post is inaccurate but I am afraid it's true.
"There is a large percentage of MEGA whites that don't like Rap, Hip Hop and R & B because of the race of the artists."
Having gone to school in a district that was 51% black that integrated without having to call out the police, serving on an integrated USAF, and worked for equal opportunity Fortune 500 companies, I really don't understand this attitude but I can only guess in America you have the Right to be Wrong.
94Q's big mistake was what a lot of top 40 stations around the nation did in the early 80s...tried to superserve the boomers by "growing up with them" and going AC.Back in 1989, WQXI-FM/WSTR PD Bill Cahill said that changing the branding was the right way of flipping format, and that if they said "we're the new 94Q," people would say, "What? Again?"
Different players now, of course, but how many "new Star 94"s have we endured?