Perhaps market size is our difference. I was working as a Pd in medium markets. Can’t speak for majors.
What I meant is many record companies pushed their product in unorthodox ways.
If a programmer was adding records based on other stations adding it without knowing how the record was performing on those stations, that was on that programmer, not the system.Here is the deal. Hits were not formed by listener response. Request lists were not included, never were. It all was based on “adds” by radio stations. If a wide number of top radio stations added the record then it became a hit. Sure some exceptions, but this was the formula. I used to think listeners guided playlists but as I soon discovered it really had nothing to do with it. There were deeper implications as to why some records became hits. I was there, lived it and learned it. I want to use the P word but won’t. But basically a corrupt system.
I don't fully agree.Someone has to represent the music. Someone has to make the radio people aware that there's music out there they should listen to, or there's some research they haven't considered. Otherwise, radio either just plays what it wants, or it just plays the same old songs over & over. Choosing what to play on the radio shouldn't be an autocracy, where one person makes decisions about what gets played. He should hear from the people who represent the artists and the music. Don't you think?
I've never looked at new music from that perspective. To me, it is "what will make the listener happy". And more so, "what will make the listener keep listening".Isn't that fair? I'm not saying it's always ethical, but at least the musicians have representation. And if the music sucks, the listeners will tell you, and you can stop playing it. But at least the music had a chance.
Nope. Sirius has been around in one form or another for 20+ years. It peaked at 34 million-ish subscribers more than three years ago and hasn't been able to break that. It's 10% of the total population of the U.S.Does sirius radio pose a threat at all to terrestrial radio? It seems like there there's different songs played on both gold and current stations.
With less than 10 percent of Americans willing to pay for the service, I'd say no.Does sirius radio pose a threat at all to terrestrial radio? It seems like there there's different songs played on both gold and current stations.
Was that the same Tom Donohue that DJ'd KYA in the 60's?The sad part of the story was that Donohue was overweight and died of a heart attack in 1975.
Yes.Was that the same Tom Donohue that DJ'd KYA in the 60's?
And remember that the number is inflated by counting unsold cars on dealer lots and trial subscription periods. If you look at the data, we can say that only about one in ten new car buyers subscribes to the service after the trial is over.Nope. Sirius has been around in one form or another for 20+ years. It peaked at 34 million-ish subscribers more than three years ago and hasn't been able to break that. It's 10% of the total population of the U.S.
Are there any numbers for app-only subscribers? Last car repair we got, we were offered a 3 month app-only trial (listen with Apple CarPlay!), We're already subscribers so couldn't use.And remember that the number is inflated by counting unsold cars on dealer lots and trial subscription periods. If you look at the data, we can say that only about one in ten new car buyers subscribes to the service after the trial is over.
We are only treated to SiriusXM numbers as part of their press releases and annual / quarterly financial reports to shareholders. We should get the 2022 report soon and we can see what they show.Are there any numbers for app-only subscribers? Last car repair we got, we were offered a 3 month app-only trial (listen with Apple CarPlay!), We're already subscribers so couldn't use.
Missing is the word "some".We can debate this left and right. But corruption between record companies and radio programmers was real. I am not proud of it, but was the hand I was delt.
Its crazy the amount of power spins today though...a station that plays their top songs 115-120 times a week is hard to listen to for me!Missing is the word "some".
There are many PDs who would not sacrifice their job and station by playing stiffs. Corporate-supervised stations had double-checks on adds, enhanced by frequent revision of monitors like MediaBase and which have been in operation with electronic monitoring for nearly three decades.
The days of Joe Isgro and other independent promoters... of PDs accepting coke-o-grams... of unsupervised PDs... are pretty much over.
I was part of a "due diligence" involving a record company sale where possible liability of the rec company for illegal practices had to be evaluated. Things like trips to conventions that did not exist, vehicles, illegal substances and the like had to be evaluated even though they were documented as "entertainment" and "travel expenses" and the like to determine if a potential buyer might be liable in any way. The purchase was not made.
Since then, consolidation has removed most stations that could enhance a record's chart position as companies check too deeply for such practices to be effective. And record companies have less concern for radio plays in most formats, in that new media has made it harder to fake a song's popularity.
We can go back to the 50's and 60's where record companies would fake chart positions by shipping huge quantities of singles to one-stops and distributors by using "returnable for credit" on the invoice. The trades, then, looked at that data to create charts and stations looked at the charts to see what they might add. Those practices are a big part of why the tip sheets were created as stations realized that the charts in Billboard, Cash Box and Record World were distorted by such practices.
Go back to the huge years of WABC in New York where the #1 song was played every 90 minutes. That was 112 times a week. And that was in the 60's... over 50 years ago.Its crazy the amount of power spins today though...a station that plays their top songs 115-120 times a week is hard to listen to for me!
It is still crazy though. If youre an avid listener of said station, it is torturous! (Not to mention competing stations playing the same song.)Go back to the huge years of WABC in New York where the #1 song was played every 90 minutes. That was 112 times a week. And that was in the 60's... over 50 years ago.
So what is done today is very normal in that format and is very appropriate for a station in a CHR or Urban CHR or Churban format.