DavidEduardo said:
I find it hard to believe that Boomers would like that station. The beginning of the Baby Boom was 1/1/46, meaning that the oldest is 65. And that means that when rock 'n roll Top 40 radio took over youth listening in the 55-59 period the oldest boomer was a pre-teen. I don't know any 65-year-olds who are into Doris Day and Benny Goodman or even Sinatra... or more recent stuff that sounds like those stars of the previous generation.
+1.
And I also agree that the CRTC more or less created and doomed CFZM in one stroke.
Now me, I happen to
like the station. Listen to it all the time when I'm in and around T-O two or three times a year. But I realiz that my eclectic tastes are VERY atypical. The can segue from Rosemary Clooney to the Beatles and I'm fine with it. But whenever I hear them do this sort of stuff (whch is fairly often), I always find myself wondering "How the (heck) can they attract an audience doing this stuff? And while they do have a lot of great stuff on the station, they also have a couple of lame talk shows inserted for no apparent reason, and things like "The Scottish Hour"....or whatever it is....in the middle of Sunday afternoons, etc.
Back OT, it would be interesting to hear a more focused version of the format (perhaps vintage top 40) on Chicago airwaves, but I don't see it every happening. And if it did, I'd say 560 would be a better place for it than 890. As I said earlier, they could find some old Howard Miller tapes, chop them up, and voicetrack the thing! ;D