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Radio should not try to sound like someone's personal iPod. Gigantic mistake. It's called BROADcasting for a reason.
And as has been pointed out: It's WORKING! This station is #1 in it's market. Sometimes shallow is what the market wants.
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Radio should not try to sound like someone's personal iPod. Gigantic mistake. It's called BROADcasting for a reason.
ZZO's 6+ share has tanked over the past couples surveys. Similar results at 105.7 "Man Up!" in Greensboro, which uses the same awful premium choice (I call it "poor choice") central playlist from iHM corporate; their numbers are at or near a record low for the current brand.
For many years - WHEB was a terrific small market rock station.
There are really no "central playlists" as the music is done locally on each stations under the guidance of local and national programmers.
WHEB can get away with it because of market size and lack of competing signals playing Rock (the alternates are all out of market stations with much weaker signals).
It's not like there's a lot of great local music that they might want to hear on the radio the way it may have been done in the 1930s.
They want to hear the national artists who they see on TV, who play songs they know. That's why this station is #1.
Sure they also have access to Sirius, Pandora, and Spotify, but when they listen to those services, it's all national music too, even when they create their own personal playlists. So why pay $20 a month for something you get for free?
Yes, ignoring the preferences of local listeners in favor of using a homogenized playlist that resembles a fiery trainwreck in an effort to be all things to all people is absolutely a bad thing, in my view.
I find your suggestion that 100.3 WHEB is a perfectly suitable substitute for Sirius, Pandora or Spotify to be ludicrous.
I said to the insiders that my opinion is new music is the main reason for the boom in country right now. I said that is what rock needs.
What data do you have on the "preferences of local listeners?" Have you done any analysis of their music collections? Or is just your personal opinion?
Why pay $20 a month for something you get for free?
So, you're actually suggesting with a straight face that WHEB's playlist is based on in-depth local research?
I erred in referencing WHEB specifically, but it sure seemed you were implying that the value proposition of Sirius, Pandora & Spotify for fans of music
No, I have zero firsthand knowledge of the song/artists preferences of Rock radio listeners in the Portsmouth market. Not sure what that has to do with iHeart, though.
You're arguing the station is "ignoring the preferences of local listeners." I'm just asking how do you know? This particular station appears to be fairly active in the market. They're not just pulling a 24/7 format in off the bird. Which is what a listener to Sirius would get, along with national hosts. .
Although SiriusXM does tend to go a bit deeper than most FM stations,
We've moved on from genres and decades.
I agree...radio stations will be more about lifestyle and less about genre. The Garth thing doesn't surprise me. When Chesney sells out Gillette for two nights, those people aren't driving in from Jamaica Plain. It's a different clientele from Sunday afternoon.