It's perception. I'm not saying I agree with it, but that's how it's done.
WhoDat! said:you are right i wasn't talking about agency buys
but now that we are, all of the syndicated shows that play 40+ year old music like Tom kent, Dick Bartley, the re-runs of dick clark, machine gun kelly mike harvey, ALL rely on National ad buys for their syndication.... sounds like they're getting them.
you always seem to get caught up with WORDS Oldies/Classic Hits...
obama calls the WAR in Afghanistan an "Overseas Military Contingency"-- for the people who FIGHT & die there ITS STILL A- W A R., and calling it something else doesn't change what it is. nobody is fooling anyone by calling Oldies Classic Hits.
WHATEVER i think everyone knew what i meant. its a generic term.
scanman1 said:I always refer to WLS-FM as "Oldies from the 60s through 80s with an emphasis on the 60s and 70s" and 104.3 KHits as "Oldies from the 60s through 80s with an emphasis on the 70s and the 80s" and it never seems to cause any confusion with anyone.
but now that we are, all of the syndicated shows that play 40+ year old music like Tom kent, Dick Bartley, the re-runs of dick clark, machine gun kelly mike harvey, ALL rely on National ad buys for their syndication.... sounds like they're getting them.
you always seem to get caught up with WORDS Oldies/Classic Hits...
obama calls the WAR in Afghanistan an "Overseas Military Contingency"-- for the people who FIGHT & die there ITS STILL A- W A R., and calling it something else doesn't change what it is. nobody is fooling anyone by calling Oldies Classic Hits.
WHATEVER i think everyone knew what i meant. its a generic term.
Tom Wells said:If it ain't live, it's an oldie. Every blinkin' station on the air is full of oldies, regardless of how long ago the recording was made.
Inasmuch time is a just a distortion of perception, age is irrelevant.
The term is "convenient currency" in language, but I sure wouldn't wear it as a tatoo or an imager.
My radio station features music from the beginnings of electrically-recorded music to the present, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
But this is still 85 years of music, and I never use the term on-air or in liners.
Let the listener figure it out. Don't limit yourself with definitions that limit what you can be.
I think they should avoid the term and just BE.
WhoDat! said:Oldies is not a bad word on-air. It is a kiss of death at the sales level, though. A lot of classic hits stations use the oldies term on air, but the sales pitch refers to classic hits, and carefully skirts any association with 55+ demos.
Tom Wells said:"Musicradio" a la 1974 woked very well, and does not imply anything other than music and radio.
No need to "call" the music anything.
skippertthomas said:...Pre-Listened Hits.....94-7/WLS (like the stupid term, 'pre-owned vehicles')...
Tom Wells said:"Musicradio" a la 1974 woked very well, and does not imply anything other than music and radio.
No need to "call" the music anything.
WhoDat! said:i work at an "Oldies" station and the nice thing about it is when you go to a business or hear someone's radio blasting The Beatles or Motown, you don't have to guess what station they're listening to..
i'm outside the market, not in Chicago. and most markets have only 1 station that could be playing that kind of music.RayInChicago said:WhoDat! said:i work at an "Oldies" station and the nice thing about it is when you go to a business or hear someone's radio blasting The Beatles or Motown, you don't have to guess what station they're listening to..
In Chicago, you do. Could be WLS-FM or K-Hits.
RayInChicago said:WhoDat! said:i work at an "Oldies" station and the nice thing about it is when you go to a business or hear someone's radio blasting The Beatles or Motown, you don't have to guess what station they're listening to..
In Chicago, you do. Could be WLS-FM or K-Hits.