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I found this a few months ago, but never posted it. I kept meaning to, but didn't. :-) Anyhoo.

At the Board of Storm and Fury, in the ongoing debate over 'Some Girls' as a choice of single, someone opined that it was a bad song, then said, paraphrasing here, that if it's a good song, radio stations will play it. If 'Some Girls' isn't being played, we can't blame the radio station.

Au contraire, my friend. 1) Good songs aren't automatically played. 2) Yep, we can blame the stations, or more specifically, their owners.

So here's the article I've been meaning to post, on the state of radio in the country. The most appalling bits are the part about MTV (wow, no surprise there). It's long so I'll just snippetize the part that applies, but you can read the entire thing at the Las Review Journal. The article is by Doug Elfman.



By Doug Elfman
Friday, December 27, 2002


As for commercial radio stations, a lot of people complain about it, but no one does anything about it, hardy-har-har.

Except, suddenly, local commercial radio has made a noticeable jump in quality. The reason is simple. There's more good stuff out on the national scene for local radio to choose from. (This still doesn't alleviate the problem that we have no college radio station!)

Commercial radio stations can be blamed for being myopic about their niche demographics. Teen pop goes here. Classic pop goes there, for people who want to hear Gary Numan's "Cars" for the 1,000th time. (Uh, that would be me, actually.)


But mostly, commercial radio is driven by a few obvious factors.

For one thing, if a station is owned by Infinity or Clear Channel (two companies that own more stations than any others in America), then a station is going to play song lists shaped by Infinity's or Clear Channel's national headquarters. Just like a local Burger King sells Whoppers, and not alligator-on-a-stick.


Radio stations also reflect the pop, hip-hop, rock and country charts in Billboard magazine.

And stations pick up cues from the top music video play list at MTV and VH1. That's not good. Radio stations have already cut standard rotations from Top 40 down to top 26 or so. If they follow MTV's lead, that list could get cut to 10. The Los Angeles Times last week reported that MTV is cutting the number of music videos and artists it will play to a "Big 10," plus a few stragglers. What jackasses.

The corporate angle on radio stations can't be stressed enough. A recent series of stories about commercial radio ran on public radio, decrying the end of the DJ as the DJ used to be defined, by personality and power. DJs have far less ability to play favorites and requests.

Instead, they get handed play lists, which is a dirty rotten shame, but what can you do?
We live in a company, not a country, anymore. George Orwell had it all wrong. Big brother isn't the government. Big brother is corporations. Two of them.

Date: 2004-03-07 05:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charlidos.livejournal.com
I think this is infinitely sad and it's the reason I don't listen to our commercial stations (although it's not quite as bad, in terms of who decides what gets played). We have a great station that is stateowned and commercial-free. The mix of music they play is fanastic and often it's whatever the producers care for. And that's how it should be. Who the heck wants to hear the same song 3000 times in one day? It's baffling.

Date: 2004-03-07 05:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foxmonkey.livejournal.com
Who the heck wants to hear the same song 3000 times in one day? It's baffling.

I can't understand it. The last time I made an honest effort to listen for a particular song (which meant listening for at least two hours, which was as long as I could stand it), I think I heard the same three songs at least four times in that stretch of time. Every time I heard the song start, I'd be amazed. That one again? ALREADY!?

From top 40 to 26 and now 10. TEN friggin' songs, plus some *stragglers*? It's beyond ridiculous.

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