No Picture
AU & NZ

Chrissie, Sam & Browny serve up Grand Final Breakfast

Nova 100’s Chrissie, Sam & Browny are today celebrating one of the biggest sporting events in Melbourne with the return of their annual Grand Final Breakfast.Kicking off the AFL Grand Final weekend, they’re  broadcasting live from The Pub at Crown this morning. It’s Chrissie, Sam & Browny’s first Grand Final Breakfast since 2019, and the… Read More
The post Chrissie, Sam & Browny serve up Grand Final Breakfast by Sarah Patterson appeared first on Radio Today. […]

US

Lost Factor 2000: New Millennium, Same Teen Backlash

In the late ’90s and early ’00s, with teen pop at its peak, Clear Channel Radio (now iHeart Media) rewrote the Top 40 landscape with a handful of stations branded as “Kiss-FM” and positioned as “all the hits, not just some of them.” Those stations, often in Midwestern markets, played more Hip-Hop, R&B, and rhythmic […] […]

US

Nashville Public Radio Sells 1430 WPLN

Nashville Public Radio is selling one of its three signals in its home market. Tony Richards’ Kensington Digital Media will acquire “WPLN International” 1430 WPLN Madison TN for $1.3 million. The deal includes the real estate associated with the station’s four tower array for its 15kW day/1kW night signal, but not the current call letters. […] […]

US

WGER Gets Rocked To Its Core

Alpha Media flipped Hot AC “Mix 106.3” WGER Saginaw MI to 90s/early 2000s based Rock/Alternative “106.3 The Core” at noon today. The station adds the WRIF Detroit based Dave & Chuck The Freak for mornings becoming the first non-Beasley Media owned affiliate for the show. Mack joins as midday host after previously hosting that shift […] […]

US

Fox Sports Radio Adds Covino & Rich To Weekday Lineup

Fox Sports Radio will add Steve Covino and Rich Davis to their weekday lineup from 5-7pm eastern/2-4pm pacific starting Monday, September 26. The duo have been hosting a weekend show on Fox Sports Radio for the past year. They have been paired together since 2004 on what was then Sirius’ Maxim Radio and have also […] […]

ASIA

Radio Re-Socialised

Content from BPRMuch has been written about how radio has reinvented itself over the years, most notably how it transformed because of the introduction of television, with radio moving from a medium people primarily consumed in the evening to a medium mainly consumed during the morning and workday.Radio’s enduring attribute has been its ability to wrap around the lives of people, listening being something that does not prevent a person from doing other things unlike reading or watching. No other form of media has moulded itself to the way people live, like radio has.For decades radio has been principally “socialised” as a source of information and entertainment at the beginning and end of the working day. This is where radio has performed best and been most securely anchored to the daily routine of adults.The last few years has however created a “decoupling” of the way radio is socialised. First, there are more audio and entertainment choices diluting usage, second, the way people work and think about work and life has changed for many. This has created a much more complex matrix of listening behaviour and motivation. It would be fair to say that during the last two years all the listening balls were thrown into the air, and we are now starting to see where they are landing.All the evidence points to a resocialisation of radio amongst many adult listeners which presents both challenges and opportunities. Some key issues include:
More people using more radio stations for shorter periods.
Many people, no longer starting their day with radio.
More people using radio on weekends.
Fewer people listening to radio every day.
More people starting their radio listening day after 9am.
The most telling finding however is that relative to all the other listening choices adult listeners have radio is increasingly distinguished by its combination of music, personality, information, and localism. Importantly, most adults prefer this listening “mix” as a backdrop to their daily lives and get annoyed when their favourite radio station does something to screw it up and they have to find satisfaction in something else. The majority of adults who move from radio to other audio are “pushed”.  The good news is that they become equally disenchanted with other audio after a while and return to radio.What defines “localism” however has changed. It is not just local news, name-dropping suburbs, and community service announcements. It is now much more about conveying a sense of shared experience with the listener.Understanding the resocialisation of radio in your market and why people behave the way they do is more than critical, it defines your future.By Wayne Clouten, BPR […]