grantchester said:
Look beyond 25-54, check the qualitative... level of education, family income, leadership positions. Classical gives a better audience.
And think about this: Classic Rock and Oldies are based on the premise that people choose the music they listened to in high school. In 5 more years, the class of '79 will be 54, and classic rock will be OVER. Likewise mainstream oldies. After the mid-70's, there was no longer a mass-appeal mainstream. Instead there were sub-Genres; punk. metal, disco, rap, etc etc... There will be no such thing as mass-appeal oldies in a few more years.
Txchipk puts premium on the stupid demographic... good luck with that.
Try re-reading my post. I don't put a premium on younger listeners; advertisers do. I personally have WRR as a pre-set and don't listen to rap.
For the classical audience, it may not be as big as hip-hop, but there will always be new listeners coming up through high school and college fine arts programs. Pop fads will come and go. Beethoven Bach and Mozart will live on. James Galway, Jascha Heifitz, Yo Yo Ma and similar artists will be heard for generations. Whatever happened to Vanilla Ice and M.C. Hammer?
I mourn for the posters who call classical boring, background, and bad. I'm sure the marketplace will serve you well.
Whether you like it or not, as a format, classical skews heavily towards older listeners. Whether you like it or not, commercial radio station owners want to make money and the way they make money is from revenue from selling ad time. As a result, it is going the way of the beautiful music/EZL format because advertisers don't put a premium on the audience. Advertisers are interested in getting people to switch to their product; selling to people who are loyal to other products is not attractive.
If it were a format that drew an audience advertisers sought out, there would be more than two dozen commercial classical music stations left in the entire country. Most major markets no longer have a commercial classical outlet now:
#1 New York has no commercial classical music station
#2 LA has no commercial classical music station
#3 Chicago's WFMT 98.7 is operated commercially by non-comm WTTW
#4 KDFC San Francisco is the only commercial classical station owned by for profit company (Entercom) in a major market
#5 WRR Dallas owned by the city of Dallas
#6 Houston has no commercial classical music station
#7 Atlanta has no commercial classical music station
#8 Philadelphia has no commercial classical music station
#9 DC has no commercial classical music station
#10 WCRB Boston is being sold to non-comm WGBH
#11 Detroit has no commercial classical music station
#12 Miami has no commercial classical music station
#13 KING is owned by a non-profit partnership including the Seattle Symphony and Opera after it was donated by the previous owner.
#14 Puerto Rico has no commercial classical music station
#15 Phoenix has no commercial classical music station
WRR is only around because the city owns it. Almost every proposal in the last 25 years from groups interested in buying the 101.1 facility from the city involves removing the format from 101.1. Previous articles about how WRR does indicate it generates only $2-$3M a year and generates a little profit. The revenue leaders in the market earn 10x that much.