I hesitated creating this post because it could be taken in the same way Bob Smizik's 1993 cynical "Why are people excited that the Penguins are in the playoffs? It's only the first round!" column could be.
But this has not only been the hottest topic anyone can remember on the Pittsburgh board, but has been leading the entire Radio-Info community for a week and is even generating more interest than Don Imus' return.
And I'm dumbfounded.
Could it be that because this is the internet, therefore attracting a younger audience, that this topic has been so popular?
Maybe it's because CHR, or Top 40, has never been my cup of tea that I don't get it.
It's the music of fads and not basics. CHR has always been 5-10 songs I like and 30-35 I don't to me (which has nearly become the WDVE percentage of late as well).
It is a format more about videos and the way an artist looks than the sound.
Maybe it's because B-94 wasn't getting great ratings when they switched the format that I don't get it. In fact, when K-Rock had Howard Stern I believe the ratings improved.
Maybe it's because it seems the talent let go when B-94 first went out of business won't be coming back. Your heart naturally goes out to those who went down with B-94 in 2004 and that's kind of what makes this switch a bit tragic. Good people have now lost their jobs not by their own doing but because of corporate mismanagement.
And you know, doesn't the recent format flops at CBS just show these people have absolutely no idea on how to do anything original or fresh?
"What? The X doesn't have Howard Stern anymore? Well- WE'LL PICK HIM UP- even though he'll only be around for a few months and use his program to do nothing but promote satellite radio?
We can't make K-Rock work without Stern? Okay- let's try a talk format with primarily recycled talent that has not succeeded in the format before.
What? We can't make that work? Well, let's go back to what we did in the 80s and 90s!"
Realizing that a large audience of B-94's target audience won't know anything about the Jim Quinn-Liz Randolph scandal, B-94 will always be the station of the Quinn-Randolph scandal to Pittsburgh just like Channel 11 news will always be the outfit that showed Bud Dwyer's suicide.
And perhaps, if any of B-94's audience does find out about it, it will help them attract new listeners for the same reason I started listening to rock music with raunchy lyrics when I was a teenager.
But I'm inclined to believe Pittsburgh businesses WILL remember B-94 as that station. They are of the age to remember it.
And you have to wonder if a station with that reputation running a dying format is going to sell a lot of ads.
But this has not only been the hottest topic anyone can remember on the Pittsburgh board, but has been leading the entire Radio-Info community for a week and is even generating more interest than Don Imus' return.
And I'm dumbfounded.
Could it be that because this is the internet, therefore attracting a younger audience, that this topic has been so popular?
Maybe it's because CHR, or Top 40, has never been my cup of tea that I don't get it.
It's the music of fads and not basics. CHR has always been 5-10 songs I like and 30-35 I don't to me (which has nearly become the WDVE percentage of late as well).
It is a format more about videos and the way an artist looks than the sound.
Maybe it's because B-94 wasn't getting great ratings when they switched the format that I don't get it. In fact, when K-Rock had Howard Stern I believe the ratings improved.
Maybe it's because it seems the talent let go when B-94 first went out of business won't be coming back. Your heart naturally goes out to those who went down with B-94 in 2004 and that's kind of what makes this switch a bit tragic. Good people have now lost their jobs not by their own doing but because of corporate mismanagement.
And you know, doesn't the recent format flops at CBS just show these people have absolutely no idea on how to do anything original or fresh?
"What? The X doesn't have Howard Stern anymore? Well- WE'LL PICK HIM UP- even though he'll only be around for a few months and use his program to do nothing but promote satellite radio?
We can't make K-Rock work without Stern? Okay- let's try a talk format with primarily recycled talent that has not succeeded in the format before.
What? We can't make that work? Well, let's go back to what we did in the 80s and 90s!"
Realizing that a large audience of B-94's target audience won't know anything about the Jim Quinn-Liz Randolph scandal, B-94 will always be the station of the Quinn-Randolph scandal to Pittsburgh just like Channel 11 news will always be the outfit that showed Bud Dwyer's suicide.
And perhaps, if any of B-94's audience does find out about it, it will help them attract new listeners for the same reason I started listening to rock music with raunchy lyrics when I was a teenager.
But I'm inclined to believe Pittsburgh businesses WILL remember B-94 as that station. They are of the age to remember it.
And you have to wonder if a station with that reputation running a dying format is going to sell a lot of ads.