atlantaboy said:
When you mix 80s with 60s/70s, though, you're appealing to people in their 50s/60s (people in their 40s were in elementary school in the 70s) - in south Florida, there are TONS of advertisers that want to target retired citizens, due to the sheer percentage of the population and programs available to them
The same is definitely not true in Atlanta
I completely disagree! First of all, I would say Q105 probably sprinkles a little 60s in with what was predominantly 70s and 80s music.
Second of all, I am in my mid-40s and I remember most of the music from the entire 70s decade. And even most of what would be played on an oldies station from the 60s. I even know most of the major 50s hits, even though that was before I was born. My kids who are 16 and 13 know quite a bit of the 70s and 80s music, because they hear me play it and because so much of it ends up in commercials or recycled on TV or played at parties. There were kids aging from 3 to 13 on the boat last weekend and they were all into the music being played that afternoon on Q105. Fun music transcends generations!
And like I said, excluding the 60s, The Groove started out mixing a lot of the 70s and 80s disco and dance hits when it started. Plus, AGH was playing a lot of 60s. You can't tell me there isn't a market in Atlanta for music from this era.
But again, my point is that the reason I think Max and AGH failed in Atlanta wasn't because there wasn't a market for music from the era. It was because the music they played from those eras was mostly boring. Max played WAY to much "Wind Beneath My Wings" and other AC music from the area. It was boring to listen to.
But if they created "Atlanta's Classic Party Station", with live DJs from 6a-12p, and play dance, party and fun songs from the 70s and 80s, and mix in some 60s and maybe even a sprinkling of 90s and I think it would do well in Atlanta.