What part of Duh do you not understand?
What part of BS do you not understand?
What part of Duh do you not understand?
What part of BS do you not understand?
Sure he did. He claims to have listeners that don't show up in the ratings. Fine. So show me how we can quantify them. Get me Chuck's phone number or email address. Of course, if he's just some anonymous poster on a message board, that's where the BS factor comes in.
Actually, I just went through other posts. Sounds like he's a small broadcaster
While I don't think that terrestrial radio won’t completely die – it will continue on life support like newspapers and network TV - I do think internet radio is the future.
We'll see. But, with the way certain kinds of music are disappearing from commercial radio, I very highly doubt music focus on the web will change.
If any stations or services ask for payment, it's optional.
You're talking about now. I'm talking about in a few years.
No comment about this at all? I thought it would set up at least five more pages by now!There are a couple of things I've been meaning to say but my computer's been down and for some reason, haven't been able to post on this website with the computer I was using. Hopefully, this is the right thread. It has been mentioned that before AC went soft in the early 80s, it was very close in tempo to Top 40, without the most extreme songs. What I recall was that it wasn't particularly "gold heavy" either, not more so than Top 40 was. Page Two, as Paul Harvey would say: For over a decade, I've heard professional broadcasters on this website repeatedly explain to listeners that the average listener doesn't hear a song multiple times per day because they don't listen that way. The other day, I heard the new Taylor Swift song, "Shake It Off", five times in less than an hour and a half, between three stations, twice on one CHR, once on the other and twice on the mainstream AC. The latter is the one that got my attention. I mentioned it to my 15 year-old granddaughter and she said that it was my own fault for changing stations but that an hour and a half was a perfectly reasonable amount of time between airings of the same song because the same people wouldn't be listening at both times. I said that it was pretty amazing that she had figured this out by herself and she said, "Well, it's only common sense".
Maybe it is because there are now FOUR (yes, FOUR) different active threads about the SAME topic (soft music on AC radio) here. Are our attention spans THAT short? Does anyone ever check for existing active threads before starting new ones? No wonder they get away with playing the same song every 90 minutes. No one is paying any attention!No comment about this at all? I thought it would set up at least five more pages by now!
According to the Wikipedia article about AC, the format had it's roots in easy listening and soft rock. That's why I've always considered it synonymous with soft and lite. It wasn't until the late 1990s that I ever heard of Hot AC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adult_contemporary_music
No, it was regular daytime programing. I only mentioned the "five times" part because I thought it was interesting. I fully expect CHR to play the "powers" every 70 minutes or so but didn't figure on an AC running that short. Not long ago, it was more like four hours between plays.For whatever it's worth, I have to agree with the granddaughter, at least to the extent that each station was "doing its own thing" and the fact that you caught the same song repeatedly was due to your channel-flipping. The 90-minute time block does seem too short though; is there a chance that at least one of these "plays" was on a syndicated or packaged show (a countdown show, etc.) and the other part of the station's own programming?