Dancerev889 said:Corporate gets it. Corporate america maybe not the radio industry.
That's what I meant with "corporate"....the radio industry aspect of it.
Dancerev889 said:Corporate gets it. Corporate america maybe not the radio industry.
BJ Steigner said:What will it take (besides programming and capital money) to bring a dance oriented station to every big market in the USA?? Such as NYC, LA, Chicago, Philly, Pittsburgh, etc.
Tony Santiago said:BJ Steigner said:What will it take (besides programming and capital money) to bring a dance oriented station to every big market in the USA?? Such as NYC, LA, Chicago, Philly, Pittsburgh, etc.
BJ, please pay close attention here.
If corporate (meaning the owners of radio stations) were really UP on EDM, there would have been stations already. I really think corporate in radio has NO REAL IDEA on what to make of it. It's not that they don't see the trends, but they really don't know where this is all going. And for what they're presenting as "dance" (meaning what's on CHR radio, aka Flo Rida, Chris Brown, Pitbull, etc.) and not going DEEPER in terms of bringing up stations with that format, I really think there is that disconnect and quite honestly as long as the money comes in, corporate (radio) doesn't care. And quite honestly, with what had happened recently with Mark Farina and Calvin Harris not being able to get on the "decks" at clubs in Las Vegas because of "table service" influence, I think EDM may be in trouble in that sense.
"Corporate" already alienated the youth market for the most part; they're all on digital media players, social media (Facebook, Twitter) and listening to Internet streaming stations on their smartphones via apps such as Tune In Radio. THAT'S where everything has gone in that sense. In a few years you'll hear more "spoken word" formats (sports, talk, news) on the FM dial versus music with the exception of the stations targeting the 45+ audience. In New York we may only see Z-100 and perhaps Hot 97 as the only stations on the FM dial geared to the under 30 crowd.
By all means I'm not giving up in terms of pushing for a dance station in the New York market. Yet I also see the "writing on the wall" too.
BJ Steigner said:Tony Santiago said:BJ Steigner said:What will it take (besides programming and capital money) to bring a dance oriented station to every big market in the USA?? Such as NYC, LA, Chicago, Philly, Pittsburgh, etc.
BJ, please pay close attention here.
If corporate (meaning the owners of radio stations) were really UP on EDM, there would have been stations already. I really think corporate in radio has NO REAL IDEA on what to make of it. It's not that they don't see the trends, but they really don't know where this is all going. And for what they're presenting as "dance" (meaning what's on CHR radio, aka Flo Rida, Chris Brown, Pitbull, etc.) and not going DEEPER in terms of bringing up stations with that format, I really think there is that disconnect and quite honestly as long as the money comes in, corporate (radio) doesn't care. And quite honestly, with what had happened recently with Mark Farina and Calvin Harris not being able to get on the "decks" at clubs in Las Vegas because of "table service" influence, I think EDM may be in trouble in that sense.
"Corporate" already alienated the youth market for the most part; they're all on digital media players, social media (Facebook, Twitter) and listening to Internet streaming stations on their smartphones via apps such as Tune In Radio. THAT'S where everything has gone in that sense. In a few years you'll hear more "spoken word" formats (sports, talk, news) on the FM dial versus music with the exception of the stations targeting the 45+ audience. In New York we may only see Z-100 and perhaps Hot 97 as the only stations on the FM dial geared to the under 30 crowd.
By all means I'm not giving up in terms of pushing for a dance station in the New York market. Yet I also see the "writing on the wall" too.
You didn't state local ownership. Corporate companies are not what I was talking about...
DJ_Perry said:For those who haven't noticed, EDM is becoming Laughable. Too much fakeness, just like when Hip Hop exploded and everybody jumped on that wagon. Now the same thing has happened to our Genre. We pushed and pushed for it to become mainstream, but now look at it. You got clown DJs making heart shapes with their hands, wearing masks, popping bottles with Paris Hilton (who recently hated "Techno" music while she was at WMC years back but now wants to DJ) , while they sync the same playlist they used at the last gig. People like Pauly D and Justin Bieber are trying to be apart of this movement...is this really the direction that will make Dance credible down the road?
DJ_Perry said:U Lost Me