Your source says teens still listen to the radio, duh.
Nowhere does it say that teen cume or TSL is as high as it was in 1974.
Nowhere does it say that teen cume or TSL is as high as it was in 1974.
Nowhere does it say that teen cume or TSL is as high as it was in 1974.
No way is teen listenership the same today as it was in 1974 or 1964 for that matter. I agree with Briancraig on the reasoning about YouTube and other technologies that teens use.
Your source says teens still listen to the radio, duh.
Nowhere does it say that teen cume or TSL is as high as it was in 1974.
If you worked the 7-midnight shift on a CHR here in the year 2014, you'd know that there are still A TON of kids listening to the radio, and interacting. They blow up my phones non-stop all night.
Big A...you're in denial of the trend in listening with teens. You can quote any study you want, but this is not what I'm seeing in the real world. (The ultimate question is...who commissioned the study? Neilsen? NAB? Of course the results will be skewed.)
Big A...you're in denial of the trend in listening with teens. You can quote any study you want, but this is not what I'm seeing in the real world. (The ultimate question is...who commissioned the study? Neilsen? NAB? Of course the results will be skewed.)
So if teens have new alternatives, it is not unusual that they use them... as no radio station wants them.
You mean the same 15 teenage listeners text you...they don't know that a phone was used originally for voice.
We don't really care what method they choose to interact with us... we just want them to interact, and they do. Quite a bit.
Big A...you're in denial of the trend in listening with teens. You can quote any study you want, but this is not what I'm seeing in the real world. (The ultimate question is...who commissioned the study? Neilsen? NAB? Of course the results will be skewed.)
They told her she should listen to the radio because it would be cheaper. Her response was, and I quote, "Why would I do that?".
My cousin is a teenage girl who always has her Ipod/Iphone glued to her hip. One day she got in trouble with her parents for spending too much money buying songs on ITunes. They told her she should listen to the radio because it would be cheaper. Her response was, and I quote, "Why would I do that?".
Now obviously this is only one person, but we all know teenagers "follow the crowd" more than anything. So I would find it hard to believe that she is listening to ITunes but all her friends are listening to the radio.
Nearly everything that 2009 Nielsen article linked in this thread states about teens and media, I haven't seen evidence of it. I'm sure there must be some valid basis for their statements, but I just ain't seein' it.
As I said earlier, the Nielsen survey covers a much broader group of people than might be included in your personal observations.
What lost me was their statement that "teens read newspapers".