Aunt Helen loves The Breeze, especially when she's upwind of Uncle Oskie. It's their new make-out station.
That's what they say, until they play it in their store.
Ten thousand songs without commercial interruption will get the Breeze into more than a few stores and offices. I heard it at on at a bank and retail business that I regularly visit.
Ten thousand songs without commercial interruption will get the Breeze into more than a few stores and offices. I heard it at on at a bank and retail business that I regularly visit.
Are these 10,000 different songs or the same 300 just repeated until they've played 10,000 without a commercial?
Once this stunt is over, I doubt that this format will have a 10,000 song playlist. It will be the same listless shopworn 300 titles on repeat...
Are these 10,000 different songs or the same 300 just repeated until they've played 10,000 without a commercial?
Once this stunt is over, I doubt that this format will have a 10,000 song playlist. It will be the same listless shopworn 300 titles on repeat...
If you actually read the thread, you'd see where Mediabase is reporting about 500 songs in rotation. There are likely to be a bunch of "Oh, wow" titles among them.
The format is likely to become default office background music - free, and diverse enough to keep a wide range of people from being annoyed. IOW, a younger version of the old WJYE - which is likely the intent. Some stores will run it to avoid paying satellite fees or because of lousy satellite reception. If "The Breeze" can figure out how to limit commercial interruptions, make commercials stand out from the music, and avoid stacking 8-10 minutes into each stopset they could be a saleable commodity. If they get numbers, they'll get revenue. Programmatic buying doesn't distinguish between foreground and background stations.
Great. Very compelling industry changing radio. I am sure everyone in the bank knew exactly what they were listening too
They will want a comparable Sirius channel or Pandora in their store. Stores do not like hearing any competition on the air in their stores.
If you actually read the thread, you'd see where Mediabase is reporting about 500 songs in rotation. There are likely to be a bunch of "Oh, wow" titles among them.
The format is likely to become default office background music - free, and diverse enough to keep a wide range of people from being annoyed. IOW, a younger version of the old WJYE - which is likely the intent. Some stores will run it to avoid paying satellite fees or because of lousy satellite reception. If "The Breeze" can figure out how to limit commercial interruptions, make commercials stand out from the music, and avoid stacking 8-10 minutes into each stopset they could be a saleable commodity. If they get numbers, they'll get revenue. Programmatic buying doesn't distinguish between foreground and background stations.
This lends itself to an interesting discussion, if one is willing to entertain it without rancor.
"Everyone in the bank knew exactly what they were listening to" ... Who knows. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't. The fact is, the radio was tuned to 96.1. If the station was on for hours or days, they probable learned about it and came to recognize it for what it offered, an indirect component of discovery and "tell a friend." The radio could have been set to the old format ("brand" ... ahem) and Director of Office Entertainment, the person in charge of making listening decisions didn't notice the difference. Perhaps the DOE discovered the station at home in his/her car on December 26th, after the All Christmas Music format ended, liked what he/she heard and tuned it in at work. The previous time I visited that particular bank, the radio was tuned to 104. At the time, 96 and 102 were in All Christmas Music Mode. Many businesses have a gatekeeper of the radio or DOE. Some offices take a vote. One day it's 106.5; the next 96.9; another 102.5 and then 96.1. Some businesses have a committee that chooses the station. This scenario lends itself "the station that everyone at work can agree on" premise. I'll be listening next time I'm in the bank to see if the Breeze remains the station of choice.
"Compelling" ... what's compelling? Your definition may not fit mine, my definition may not match yours, or that of the woman/man in the cubicle next to me. The most compelling station in the morning, like Shredd and Ragan or Janet Snyder, may turn into "10 in a row" at 8:30 because that's what gets the ratings and that's what the majority of music-oriented listeners want. The most compelling station in the market may be the sports or news talk stations, WGR, WBEN and WBFO. Do listeners, workers and clients in an office want that kind of "compelling?" It's a question, not an argument. I actually visited an optometrist's office that had WBFO on "behind the glass." The place that changes the oil in my car just wants tunes, so WHTT and Jack are the stations the guys who work there choose more often than not.
"Industry changing" ... every day of the week something happens that impacts the way people seek and make entertainment and information decisions. I remember a time in the mid 70s when my co-workers nixed WKBW as their station of choice in favor of Rock 102. It was part of a move from AM to FM, one local occurrence that I witnessed, replicated nationwide as listeners moved from AM to FM. Small stuff happens that becomes big stuff.
So there's that. Discuss?
You got that right Buddy. A lot of homes don't even have a radio. People under 35 listen get their compelling information and entertainment from smart speakers, podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, streaming or satellite radio. A guy who sells for Entercom remarked "Townsquare just did Star a big favor. They blew off the few young Adult Contemporary listeners they had and handed them over to us." That seems like a simplification to me. Earlier in this thread somebody wrote that this format gets big young adult ratings in some cities. Also heard it described as "sleepy and lame." You just have to wonder if Buffalo is like those cities. I'll leave it up to you radio mavens to sort out. I'm a guy who listens to Giant FM, Jack, 97-7 and my own music on my phone.Radio is no longer in the "getting new listener" business.
If you actually read the thread, you'd see where Mediabase is reporting about 500 songs in rotation. There are likely to be a bunch of "Oh, wow" titles among them.
All the soft ACs from WFEZ and WDUV to San Diego and San Francisco are playing 450 to 500 songs. Since Miami is the oldest, I doubt any songs are not strong researching tunes, as they are several years into the format.
Not all of them are in the same rotation, though. We've already had Mediabase examples of tunes that are heard infrequently. That would qualify as an "Oh, wow" tune in the confines of that format.
We've likely got a different interpretation of "oh wow" songs.
I see them as occasional tunes that can be made relative to a morning show topic or a personality bit in other dayparts via linking with a current event, a special date or a reference in the tune. There is no regular rotation, just isolated spins for "fun".
On the other hand, there are songs that scored to near cut-off on a test that we don't want them to even be in the worst category day in and day out. So we platoon them to play a bit and then rest for a while. They are like Uncle Seth: if he stops by with the family for an afternoon, it's fine. If he looks like he is eying the guest bedroom, things are going downhill fast. Seth is one of those songs. They are not "oh, wow" songs. After a second play, they are "oh, s--t" songs.
I doubt WFEZ, long in the format, has any such risky songs in the library as oh, wow songs don't tend to be understood or received equally by different cultural groups. And Miami tends to juggle those groups very judiciously and carefully as they need both.