I listen to music more working from home, not less. No real difference in the source other than during what would have been my commute. Working from home to the extent it exists is not killing radio. š¤£
I listen to music more working from home, not less. No real difference in the source other than during what would have been my commute. Working from home to the extent it exists is not killing radio. š¤£
Right.Ummmm, the last thousand years only takes us back to around the time of the Norman Conquest, not to that of ancient Mesopotamia. It's an exaggeration, but not by THAT much.
I saw the exact same āsceneryā (and that is a most charitable term) commuting. Same damn stretch of jammed roadways. Same bland office buildings indistinguishable from one another. Same boring, sterile offices.I canāt think of anything worse than having to work from home every day and never see different scenery than when I leave the house on my own free will. Thereās something to be said for having to get up and leave every day.
As for radio listening, I was still listening to my radio stations of choice when working from home or in the office.
Album Rock was different. You might only hear one current or recent song in each set. The rest was from the library. You were exposed to music recorded years earlier, maybe before you were born.
BigA negated this opinion with his post from Record World.Album Rock was different. You might only hear one current or recent song in each set. The rest was from the library. You were exposed to music recorded years earlier, maybe before you were born. It was standard fare on Album Rock stations. This is why today's Classic Rock stations, at least at this point, don't see the need to retire their older titles and artists.
Most of the commercial AAAs died off by the 90's with just a few markets like Chicago, Portland, Seattle keeping such stations much longer. And they were exceptions, not rules.
Spanish language stations historically have played lots of gold.On the other hand, Top 40, Country, Urban and Hispanic stations played almost all current songs and maybe went back, up to five years, once or twice per hour. You really weren't exposed to oldies in most formats.
Every so often, that station gets a very good book, but then settles back to being around 13th or 14th in the market and maybe 15th in 25-54. We see those wobbles due to the problems Nielsen has had with the PPM markets.I saw on RadioInsight yesterday the commercial AAA station in Indianapolis just earned a 5.8, setting a record high for the station. It now ranks sixth in the market in the published 6+ numbers.
Thatās fair enough. I worked for a while in a job where I had to drive 50 miles to the office and work from 9pm to 7am every day. It was awful. When I was allowed to work from home I couldnāt tell if it was better or worse. While it was nice to not ruin my car with the ridiculous amount of miles I was putting on it, I literally fell asleep on my desk every time I tried to work.I saw the exact same āsceneryā (and that is a most charitable term) commuting. Same damn stretch of jammed roadways. Same bland office buildings indistinguishable from one another. Same boring, sterile offices.
Thereās something to be said for thatā¦none of it good, none of it repeatable here for fear of being censored.
Thereās something much more positive to be said for a commute that takes 30 seconds. And has the music of my choice in any given moment and mood, without requiring headphones.
KINK bills less than $2.5million now!?! Or does MK register their format as something else now?Every so often, that station gets a very good book, but then settles back to being around 13th or 14th in the market and maybe 15th in 25-54. We see those wobbles due to the problems Nielsen has had with the PPM markets.
There are only two AAA stations billing just over $10 million Denver and Chicago. The next, at under $5 million is in the Boston Market. Then comes the Hudson Valley and Indianapolis at around $2.5 million. There are nearly 830 stations in the US that billed over $2.5 million last year and only 5 are AAA. In most markets where there is a commercial AAA station the audience is mostly 55 and over.
Yes. It is reported at less than $2 million and in 25-54 it averages between 15th and 18th.KINK bills less than $2.5million now!?! Or does MK register their format as something else now?
Whoa! I remember less than a decade ago, you shared that they were a top five biller in Portland. Crazy how quickly things can change!Yes. It is reported at less than $2 million and in 25-54 it averages between 15th and 18th.
Within that age band are two, possibly three, almost completely separate social and cultural "generations".
WDAS-FM is one of the leading station in A18-49 in Philly. And their playlist spands decades. They play a lot of classic urban music