Today, letting a DJ go is generally and almost always due to cost reductions due to the entry-level recession we are in and to the overall feeling that DJs are not needed or wanted by most people under 55.What are some signs a station is about to change formats? I think when a station let's a dj go and has no replacement, even a fill in, can be a sign during a popular time. If a playlist really starts sounding stale when before it didn't could also be a sign. Thoughts?
I just noticed that happening when KCJK switched formats from alternative to active rock. They had an afternoon period once the DJ was let go where there was no announcer and it seemed like they weren't adding much new music during that time period.Today, letting a DJ go is generally and almost always due to cost reductions due to the entry-level recession we are in and to the overall feeling that DJs are not needed or wanted by most people under 55.
Playlists are determined by so many factors that we don't have a format indicator there. There are periods where there are fewer appropriate songs; stations that don't play currents likely only make significant gold library changes once or twice a year.
On many occasions, the station staff does not know of a change until the day it happens.
Or when a playlist isn't sounding stale when before it was. Sometimes a playlist will be tossed out the window and songs that weren't heard get spins that may not be consistent with format.What are some signs a station is about to change formats? I think when a station let's a dj go and has no replacement, even a fill in, can be a sign during a popular time. If a playlist really starts sounding stale when before it didn't could also be a sign. Thoughts?
Other than a flip to Christmas music before a first of the year Christmas flip, I'm not aware of a telltale sign.Or when a playlist isn't sounding stale when before it was. Sometimes a playlist will be tossed out the window and songs that weren't heard get spins that may not be consistent with format.
I'm not sure I know that one.Or when a playlist isn't sounding stale when before it was. Sometimes a playlist will be tossed out the window and songs that weren't heard get spins that may not be consistent with format.
What are some signs a station is about to change formats? I think when a station lets a dj go and has no replacement, even a fill in, can be a sign during a popular time. If a playlist really starts sounding stale when before it didn't could also be a sign. Thoughts?
Sometimes a station will mix it up before a format change to attract curiosity. As in “whatever happened to that station?”you'll know, when the ownership announces to the staff that no changes are planned...
It took many minutes to figure out what you were talking about, but finally I remembered construction sfx to signal a format change in the 70’s and 80’s. I suppose it could be interesting back in the day, but today listeners would be unamused and uninterested.There is the overused stunting of the sound of construction equipment.
I’ve also seen this done in reverse when a station is about to flip to a talk simulcast where the stereo carrier is turned off a day or two before the flip, although it seems like more larger market talk stations on FM are leaving the stereo carrier on for whatever reason.There was one odd way I figured a format flip might be coming. In Houston, Radio One had an FM All-News format (News 92 FM) on KROI from 2011-14. The transmitter was in mono due to the spoken word content.
One day in the fall of 2014 I noticed they had turned the stereo pilot back on. I thought that perhaps they were just testing it…unless…a format flip to a music format was imminent.
Sure enough, a few days later the news format was axed, and stunting began for what would become Classic Hip-Hop Boom 92.