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Most radio stations have Play Lists that are generated by producers and company executives that respond to sales data and advertising budgets. As long as people buy the stuff they play the stuff and as a long as people buy the stuff companies pay to advertise the stuff....

2006-11-15 08:58:35 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Because the record labels pay the stations' program directors to play them. It's called payola, and it is illegal, but the labels have been doing it anyways. There has been a long investigation into it for the last couple of years. Sony/BMG and Universal Music Group already settled for a few million dollars each, and I think Warner Music settled, too for several million. They are also investigating giant radio conglomerates like Clear Channel.

2006-11-15 08:59:36 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

So why do you hear a rather good variety of purple? that's in keeping with 2 issues. acceptance and listening objective audience. as an occasion purple has over 20 Million Likes on fb. those stats tells her record label and the radio station she has an excellent following. The station understand that greater listeners would be tuning in to take heed to for her. meaning greater merchandising funds for the station and greater purchases of her music. Listening objective audience degree: the different reason you're listening to purple in very extreme rotation. If the station listening stats shows that their listeners in effortless terms spend One Hour and fifteenth minutes Listening. they like to ascertain the recent listener tuning in is demonstrate to her music. For information superhighway radio we do it in any different case. We play over 250 diverse songs on a daily basis that provides listeners a greater proper variety. The platform or programming is executed this way so if a listener rather enjoys a undeniable music they are able to purchase it. wish this enables...

2016-10-15 14:30:35 · answer #3 · answered by witek 4 · 0 0

Because there are always a handful of morons who become addicted to them and call the radio stations requesting them to be played for months. This is why I stopped listening to Top 40-style stations.

2006-11-15 08:57:03 · answer #4 · answered by Kballs 3 · 0 0

I once had a deaf old man for a neighbor, he was raising a three-year-old grandson who thought "Old McDonald" was the greatest song in the world, and played it at max. volume all day and all night long. The old phart slept through it.

Most of the radio audience is on a mental par with that child.

2006-11-15 08:57:56 · answer #5 · answered by Gaspode 7 · 2 0

Because nearly all the radio programing in the entire country is done by a handful of programming services, and they keep pushing the same stuff until everybody across the country has heard it often enough to be sick of it - it sounds like you're on one of the coasts, and thus you get to hear new stuff as soon as it comes out - I'm reporting from that vast wasteland in the middle, and we get new music as soon as Wal-Mart starts stocking it.

(my local music store is the Wal-Mart Super Center on Garth Brooks Blvd. - be thankful you're not me).

2006-11-15 09:07:05 · answer #6 · answered by World Famous Neffer 5 · 0 0

So, 30 years from now they can do the same thing and call it an oldie.

2006-11-15 09:02:21 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

programming services "play-lists"...
you can't knock what sells---RE: garth brooks...
are you gonna have a hotel california avenue because the eagles have signed a similar deal with wally world

2006-11-15 09:31:37 · answer #8 · answered by takeemout01 5 · 0 0

Better quesiton. why do they call songs 2 years old 'new rock' and anything up to a year old 'brand new'

2006-11-15 09:02:40 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

because ppl still love them a little too much and therefore, they keep playing it

2006-11-15 08:55:11 · answer #10 · answered by Sally Doll 4 · 0 0

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