It's the Sirius "brand" philosophy that took over. It's an all around issue, not just the dance channels unfortunately

What really strikes me as "odd" is why the Sirius mentality comes off like traditional "radio" when clearly it is not!
Let's compare it to television. You have your regular "free" channels and "basic" channels on cable television. Yes, for cable you do pay for service but with it you get over 200 channels or so....each cable network gets something like 20c + per subscriber, so as to be profitable, they air commercials. Because they HAVE to cater to the advertisers, the free channels and cable networks have to rely on the Nielsens (just as terrestrial radio depends on the Arbs/PPM) so as to know what type of programming has to air so as to maximize things for their "bottom line".
Satellite radio is like HBO, which in terms of cable is known as a "premium" channel. People buy into the services to see shows and movies without the commercials (just like satellite radio). As such, these stations charge a higher price per subscriber since they can't depend on advertising as a revenue base. So as such, to keep the audience base from eroding, HBO and Showtime would bring on compelling programming that would NEVER air on regular television to keep that audience satisfied. That's why shows such as "The Sopranos", "Deadwood", "Entourage", "The "L" Word", "Dexter", "Weeds" as well as movies that are uncut (with objectionable language and profanity) with no commercials keep the subscribers on...because they expect it. And as such, when a show is done with its run or pulled off the schedule, part of that subscriber base goes with it. HBO took a big jump when "The Sopranos" first aired, but also took a bit of a dive after the final show. For me, "The Sopranos" was the only reason why I subscribed to HBO.
So, one would think that if we are paying a "premium" (because after all we don't HAVE to have satellite radio), we should get some sort of compelling programming that would want us to stay on. And that's where the merger killed things because in our case, you had the two differing "philosophies" (Sirius as dance/pop "hits" and XM with more of a club feel, yet still hits in their own right) blended in. For casual/occasional fans, the "BPM" style would come off as "intimidating" and with BPM fans, the sound feels "watered down" from the Alan Freed days (excellent programmer I must add). Now, if satellite radio took on commercials, then losing a couple of fans would be no big deal to them since you do have an advertising revenue base that can keep the company afloat. However, this is a case where YOU NEED to keep things at a happy medium so as both sides of the philosophy can at least tolerate what's going on because, unfortunately, BPM will NEVER be that station pre-merger again

and you really DO need us since we are paying for that "premium".
Having "Area" onto the XM side might have helped a bit though for the core househeads out there, losing "The Move" didn't help. As such on the Sirius side, you also had dedicated fans of stations like "Boombox" as well as those that wanted "The Beat" to remain...but that went. Perhaps dance fans don't matter much to Sirius/XM bottom line as rock fans do with the multitude of stations (with some rock groups getting their own dedicated "channel"), R&B/hip-hop fans, or other genres (jazz, classical, country, etc.), yet we still do subscribe and want our programming to really showcase what our community is all about. And if pop-remixes (to the core base) has to appear (and perhaps just my opinion on this) to satisfy that happy medium...so be it, just as long as the pop remix fans can open up to something that may be a bit "edgy" than what they are used to hearing.
But putting on that 80's stuff was a mistake and I am glad that Mike and Skyy rectified it. That should NEVER happen on "BPM" again. Regarding "The Strobe", I tune into that channel here and there. For those used to "The Chrome" on XM, what you're hearing is totally Sirius' take on the classic dance format and I could see why it may appear "diminshed" since XM was mainly a musical operation as opposed to acting like a terrestrial radio operation.