NSPUNX said:
It doesnt make any sense that WJMN is #1 but WBCN is #14 the reason for this is that WJMN's urban audience tends to be lower income and therefore more younger people stay at home where the parents have a home phone. Wbcn's suburban audience tends to be more middle to upper income so they move away for school, or come here for school from other parts of the country and only have a cell phone.
Where the hell did you come up with this foolish assessment?
Unless you can provide hard data to back this up, you look ignorant and appear to be espousing veiled racism.
Based upon your statements..."urban" "lower income" means what? That only the po' black folk listen to JAMN?
As someone who grew up extremely poor, I'll tell you you don't know squat. In the projects, we listened to WBCN. When I moved to the burbs, I heard more KISS 108 (JAMN didn't exist then) PRO FM, F-105, and disco/dance.
...you are really ignorant to the reality of radio in 2008. I have news for you. It's the suburban well-to-do white folk that drive CHUrban radio these days. You roll down Blue Hill Ave, or through the 'hood, and it ain't JAMN you're hearing. Trust me. Walk through the campus of BC....hey check it out!!!
You are simply presenting the typical, uneducated, young, ignorant, stereotypical viewpoint that a lot of people used to hold true. The fact is...urban/hip hop/rap/rhythmic/music for brown people is more embraced by white America than you could ever imagine.
WJMN beats WBCN because more people listen to them. Plain & simple. Look at the national & local sales charts...Rock radio is not moving product. It's an American Idol world. And those rhythmic stations are always going to beat Rock stations in cities made up like Boston.
...because they appeal broader. They cross over racially. Lots of "urban" listeners, combined with the wanna be gangstas of Wellesley. They also have big female numbers that WBCN can't touch. Same with O&A. They're not mass-appeal. And Arbitron publishes mass-appeal numbers, which are then taken to heart by advertisers who want to sell their products to the most people possible.