allenv said:Robot radio is a big tuneout factor.
GREAT quote! I've been saying that for a long time. You've summed it up quite succinctly.
allenv said:Robot radio is a big tuneout factor.
CTListener said:michael hagerty said:I think your NPR idea has a lot going for it. They've done a great job with Classical, Jazz and Blues.
I hear oldies shows on block-programmed noncommercial stations. WPKN Bridgeport has (or had; I haven't tuned in for a while) a weekly Motown show. I've also heard '50s and '60s oldies on a couple of the college stations in the Hartford area. But again, these are just weekly shows among a bunch of unrelated shows. Maybe with '50s and '60s music being squeezed off commercial radio -- with the '70s to follow before long -- oldies will become a viable format for noncomms. But there's a problem with that, too. Talk seems to generate more listener donations than any genre of music does -- jazz fans are notorious for keeping their wallets zipped tight during fundraising time -- so noncomms don't flip from classical or jazz or block programming to oldies, they flip to liberal talk instead. Would oldies listeners be willing to pay?
Is classic rock "aging out" its veteran acts, too? I don't listen to WPLR or WAQY for extended periods, but I do listen to Sirius XM's Deep Tracks, which still focuses on '60s through '80s with no apparent squeezing out of '60s acts like Janis Joplin, the Doors and Jefferson Airplane from the playlist. If the "dinosaurs" of classic rock are being tossed aside on commercial radio, maybe that might be the next format for noncomms to tackle.
stevensonair said:For the zillionth time..
NPR is not a liberal talk network.
allenv said:When you have to please shareholders comes into play in decision making in radio there lies a major problem with radio today.
...the basic math of what it costs to run a station has been the same formula for years..
Ownwership has chosen to phase out live people and be copycats musically for the most part but how many are taking that money their saving and reinvesting it in equipment or promotions??
... a large amount of listeners still enjoy a relationship with the jock playing the tunes they love and when they know no one is there to take their calls or give them up to date info or interact with them in any way they tune out and some don't come back. Robot radio is a big tuneout factor.
DavidEduardo said:A lot of people don't like jocks, and tune out. The #1 or #2 show in 18-49 and 25-54 in New York City in 10 AM to 3 PM is a mix show! Not a DJ show... that's reflective of the way people want music delivered today.
landtuna said:I'm not discounting your whole piece but young people in Noo Yawk are a breed apart from those in lessor-sized and geographically-distant cities. Using demos from a group of people who have no idea there is a very large country, theirs, west of the Hudson River is not necessarily accurate. I would have a similar comment concerning El A.
allenv said:There are many examples where no jock stations are highly rated and just as many or more when the dayparts with live humans get the highest numbers. I can tell you our classics hits station in Eastern NC draws good numbers with live jocks with specality shows on Friday and Sunday nights and live jocks in every slot except 7-midnight and overnights..In slots with no jocks the numbers drop quite a bit but I know the numbers go down after 7pm reguardless.All I can tell you is in some places a live jock is still what a large number of people want..Jocks are part of the recipe in the stew..
michael hagerty said:KFWB was the #1 Top 40 in Los Angeles for five years. It only survived 10 years in format. The station that replaced it as #1, only stayed #1 for two years and only stayed in the format for 10 years. KHJ had 14 years as the #1 Top 40 and 15 years in format.
ixnay said:michael hagerty said:KFWB was the #1 Top 40 in Los Angeles for five years. It only survived 10 years in format. The station that replaced it as #1, only stayed #1 for two years and only stayed in the format for 10 years. KHJ had 14 years as the #1 Top 40 and 15 years in format.
What station dethroned KFWB, michael? KRLA?
ixnay
DavidEduardo said:A lot of people don't like jocks, and tune out.
landtuna said:Based upon the listening habits of the younger generation (which is essentially that they are not listening to OTA radio) I'm opining that our discussion about ways to attract them are moot.
LARadioRewind said:Are there any English-language AM music stations that rank in the top ten of their respective market? Music on AM radio today seems to be either Spanish-language, adult standards or Radio Disney.
oldies76 said:I gotta go back to stop-sets though, David. Some stations just have incredibly long stop-sets, and I can understand that, to get the "more music in a row" image w/o interruptions. But 5 to 8 minutes is way, way too long. That's a justified cause of tuneout. Two hits could have played in those 8 minutes. Listeners want what they are looking for, not seemingly endless spots on things they could care less about. A newsbreak at the top of the hour is an exception.
allenv said:Whether we like to admit it or not 90% of people do change the station when a spot comes on...