• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Wrote a thought piece about whether oldies will ever come back to Atlanta

Good story. I agree about CBS could do oldies on 92.9, but that would be too easy. It 's not that CBS can't do oldies or classic hits. KLUV (Dallas) + WCBS FM would be good starting points.
 
Will Atlanta get oldies back? Yes. Will Atlanta get 1960s music back? No.
 
I am so tired of trying to get oldies back. To say that older demos have no money is the most outlandish thing I have ever heard. We are the ones keeping the economy going, not some 20 something's making minimum wage.
 
jabba17 said:
Will Atlanta get oldies back? Yes. Will Atlanta get 1960s music back? No.

If Atlanta wants an Oldies station back it would have to resemble KOSF 103.7 and 98.1 KISQ San Francisco in San Francisco. This means that there will be 2 oldies stations one with Classic Rock, The Second Oldies station will focus on 70's and 80's CHR with a motown lean.
 
good article Rodney.
Almost forgot how successful Fox 97 was in the early to mid 1990's, when Randy and Spiff were king. The note about those listeners drives home my point, they are still around, and as others have said, these are the people with money. Brand loyalty isn't a factor as it was 30 years ago. Many of these people have smartphones, high speed internet, and are adapting to technology faster than generations before.

Radio has an opportunity to get a last breath of life off offering some real diverse and appealing programming to these folks, but instead, as their idiot consultants instruct the corporate bean counters, stick with what is "safe" and don't deviate from this norm. Make sure to drive these 55+ folks to Pandora, Sirius and online faster than you can say, "you're off the air". They don't mind paying for content ya know, not like they can't afford it. Too bad corporate radio doesn't get it.
 
Is this the dave fm story you had referenced earlier or is that still coming? This thought piece is interesting but it certainly isn't about dave fm. Ro Ho are you going to follow though and publish an article on that station?
 
It's not a matter of do you have money to spend. Research shows as we all get older, we become "stuck in our ways" and advertisers are wasting their time trying to change our minds. A 25 year old Chevy owner will try a Toyota. A 33 year old will try the latest junk food. A 44 year old will buy things for their kids or are looking for family activities. A 57 year old will say I've drove the same make of car for years. It's the best and I'm not switching. I like this brand of chips. The kids moved out. I'm on a budget or still saving for retirement. If they are retired, the money has to last or it's back to work.

Young people will buy anything if the spots are exciting and flashy enough. Older people know what is quality at a reasonable price, they know how much they have to spend on it, they know if they actually need it or not and no advertising can tell them otherwise.

Yes, there are exceptions, but research shows for most radio listeners and TV viewers, this is accurate. It's why I can't listen to standards or oldies anymore on my radio.
 
Would 50s/60s music be considered Standards today? Would it work on a FM translator of an HD signal or an AM?
 
BRENT said:
To say that older demos have no money is the most outlandish thing I have ever heard.

I don't think anyone ever said that - older demos don't attract as much advertising as younger/middle-aged demos, that doesn't mean they don't have money
 
Mr_Winston-Salem said:
It's not a matter of do you have money to spend. Research shows as we all get older, we become "stuck in our ways" and advertisers are wasting their time trying to change our minds. A 25 year old Chevy owner will try a Toyota. A 33 year old will try the latest junk food. A 44 year old will buy things for their kids or are looking for family activities. A 57 year old will say I've drove the same make of car for years. It's the best and I'm not switching. I like this brand of chips. The kids moved out. I'm on a budget or still saving for retirement. If they are retired, the money has to last or it's back to work.

Young people will buy anything if the spots are exciting and flashy enough. Older people know what is quality at a reasonable price, they know how much they have to spend on it, they know if they actually need it or not and no advertising can tell them otherwise.

Yes, there are exceptions, but research shows for most radio listeners and TV viewers, this is accurate. It's why I can't listen to standards or oldies anymore on my radio.

and this is exactly the kind of mentality that is ensuring radio's suicide.
the 30 year olds of tomorrow aren't raised on radio, these are the Ipod generation. they don't even know what radio is. Meanwhile while radio is trying to kiss the rear of the current aging demo, versus redefining itself to reach the mature audiences who still tune in, only to find their programming replaced with the same 20 washout songs, same talking pieces, crammed with ads.
 
You are correct. When I talk with younger people, none of them listen to the radio unless they have to. One person in his 30s said he only listened to the radio when his rental car didn't have a connection for his Iphone! People in their 20s say radio is terrible and they never listen. It's the down side to targeting a group that follows the latest fads and tries every new thing. Not only will they change auto brands or try new restaurants and food. When there's an alternative to radio, they try it! Their music is in a cloud, waiting for their phone. Friends share new songs they like and young people hear them first on their phone or computer. Meanwhile, the older listeners still own radios and still turn them on, looking for their music. Try finding someone under 35 who listens to the radio. It's not easy. The younger they are the least likely they are to actually own a radio. So many people in their 20's only have one radio and it's in the car with an Iphone connection beside it.

Advertising is more targeted than ever and I expect fewer buys on radio for younger listeners. These days advertisers want to know the person saw or heard the ad too. It's pay per click or a camera is looking at you and changing the ad as you walk by. Those are the most valuable ads in the industry.
 
If i'am a betting man,I would say no,after Fox 97,there was Cool 105.7,that didn't last and after the end of Atlanta's Greatest Hits,I just don't see that happening.
 
If you want to do 50/60s oldies - ON THE RADIO - then do it right; put them in the proper "atmosphere" with reverb. talkovers, jingles, contests, crazy promotions, deep playlists and fast pacing - all done with LIVE jocks 24/7. (I would also say "on the AM dial", but Z93 proved that wrong. :D)

Those songs were simple ("Can you dance to it?"), entertaining and, most of all, FUN - something that a lot of us are needing today. You might be able to pull it off by allocating "blocks" of time to it (betcha Dave could try it ;)) and see how it turns out, but you won't know if you don't try.
 
FloydB said:
Would 50s/60s music be considered Standards today? Would it work on a FM translator of an HD signal or an AM?
50s/60s music is older today than standards/nostalgia was in the 80s.

If someone puts a 70s/80s classic hits format on a real signal (looking at you, CBS and Cox), then Cumulus should put TOC on one of their translators.

Here's the perfect mix IMO:

--Cox flips River from classic rock to true classic hits, maybe a Chuck FM. Is there something people have against airing a 60s-90s "play everything" format in a large market?
--Cumulus takes Rock100.5 straight AOR, combining classic rock, 80s heritage rock, and some new rock, but staying softer than Project.
--CBS takes Dave full alt, maybe (as I have said before) with a more AAA mix during the day and a harder mix in the evening, with retro alt weekends. Maybe throw in some old prog/art rock.
--Cumulus flips Journey to TOC.
--Cumulus finally kills 99X to give Dave some breathing room. Format TBD. Heck, maybe Cumulus's "Storm" classic country format to fill the old flanker role of Y106 for Kicks.
--And while we're at it, CC finally gives in to the inevitable and moves Wild to 105.3 and puts WGST back on 105.7. CC simuls Wild on Art Sutton's Suwanee translator for full metro coverage. CC picks up the 102.9 translator from R1 to simul WGST as well.

Have I missed anything?
 
So what if the oldies we eventually get is not what is expected..............
DANCE OLDIES !!!!
see my stations below
 
Rodney Ho said:
Haven't written up the Dave FM blog entry yet but should soon...

Do it Rodney, that station needs to be blow to smithereens..............I cannot believe CBS still lets this format survive in this huge market. Cities such as Philadelphia, Atlanta and Pittsburgh are experiencing growth in aging baby boomers, but declines in the number of younger people. WE NEED OLDIES BACK FAST................
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom