I have to disagree, that doing so is very childish. You have no ownership stake and are not a party to the sale but just a listener. You also don't listen to much radio. I know many stations playing songs beyond 2005. You are clueless about the research that goes in to determining what gets aired in just the right way to attract the most listeners. I am not saying you are of the group that actually believes the successful business model for radio is to make sure you do exactly what your listeners don't want. I am truly amazed by that line of thinking. In addition I know the sales end and understand what it takes to get those agencies to buy. You'd think it is all about sales ability but it's all about the right demographics, a sizable audience that matters and a cost per thousand the agency will pay. In short the commercial broadcasters in many major markets are public companies who face the scrutiny of stockholders who want to know what they get for their share...and you better deliver because radio is a business.
Interesting point you make on reality shows. I was told long ago that with the expanding number of TV options (before people started cutting the cord) meant the high cost of producing a sitcom forced the reality TV concept to take off because of the low production costs. I have no evidence that is the case. I've noticed some networks have simply become one or two TV shows rotating through every episode 24/7 likely because the budget for buying syndication rights won't allow for much more. People might watch lots of TV in real time and time altered on all devices but the actual number per channel nationwide can be pretty small.
I grew up on rock and roll. It had a nice long time in the forefront musically. longer than most. It seems today many youth prefer indy bands, many of whom sound very DIY in production values. I hear some talent in most buy nothing really grabs me and demands my focused attention. Too many sound like their second release might not be as inspired as the first. I heard an interview by a member of the Eagles when they were topping the charts who claimed all your songs were narrowed to 10 or 12 for that first album and you have to go on tour and somehow write another 10 or 12 better than the 10 or 12 on that first release. They said any group that made it to album 3 had already pulled off the impossible twice in as many years.
You have the right to disagree. I still see it as a frail ego. I see it as childish. You mean to tell me that someone being critical should be silenced? If someone came in and took over my job, forcing me out of work, I find I have the right to express my displeasure with that. They are childish for thinking that they can buy a herstige station like WCCC, put everyone out of work, flip the format, yet everyone should just be at peace with this? All in the name of Jesus, right? People do some crappy things in the name of most religions, and although this doesn't hold a candle to other actions over the last millennia, it's still crappy and (in my opinion) childish.
2005 wasn't meant to be taken as an exact year. It was an exaggeration of my point that new rock isn't really played much in this market. Its reference the year before Stern went to satellite and nationally we began to see a number of legondary rock stations systematically be flipped. Free FM, Sports Talk, and so on. Also, it's when we started noticing the rise of Jack FM and other variants of Classic Hits (I personally have no issue with Classic Hits) Around 2005 somewhat marks the surgence of an emphasis on Classic vs Modern. That's what happened specifically with WAAF and many other rock stations. To survive in those days, they brought back Classic Rock. That was fine for 15 to 10 years ago. But, time changed and classic ran its course with the new generation. Where other formats continued to change with the times, your industry left modern rock stations on a 2005ish autopilot, then threw up your hands when listenership went down.
As for your taste in current musical sound, what's the quote from WKRP? If that's what they like, perhaps they'll listen if you play it. It's not about what you like, just as much as I'm told that it's not about what I like. I don't take any stock in your statement when we have how many stations playing the same Katy Perry mindnumbing (what I call) garbage. Yet, more people like it, so it can be sustainable. But, because you don't like that "indy sound" that the kids like, you'll say it isn't worthy of being played. How about the playlists found on satellite? Does that all sound indy?
The point of the sitcom is that the TV industry deemed it dead. The same as you all in the radio industry deem rock to be dead. Funny thing is, your algorithms don't catch everything. Rock, as a style that involves playing instruments instead of using beats, will have a resurgence. Will it be hair metal, grunge, Nu-metal? No. It may adopt elements from those eras, but it won't be exactly that. Enough people will catch on to a particular sound of rock, and it will be enough to bring it back to the public eye.
Telling me I'm clueless about research is a flawed statement, about as flawed as your research in my opinion. Cliche time, you don't know me, where I've been, and what I've done (outside the snippets that I give you here). Maybe, just maybe, I have conducted some research for formal "recognition" in the past. Maybe it wasn't in radio. Still, maybe I am trained to spot flawed research. Maybe I've been grilled by some recognized professionals in my field, just for training purposes. How do you triangulate your findings? Are your methods strictly quantitative or qualitative? If they are quantitative, how can you be sure that you know why this phenomenon is happening the way that it is? If its qualitative, how can you tell that its generalizable to the entire listening audience? In other words, you could have 20 years of data, and it can still be flawed. As far as I know, you conduct phone calls and listeners willing to answer you tell you what they like. That's what they did with me, until I moved. Although that gets answers, it's still not generalizable to an entire listening market. As I said, your using an algorithm to tell you things that an algorithm can't tell you. Such as why you people stopped listening. You're taking the "what" and inserting an implied "why" to justify your business decisions. In other words, if you can sleep well at night, then take my criticism for whatever worth you find. But, I'm still entitled to share my observations.