A Clear Channel Station for Tweens
This column originally appeared March 8, 2007, at Edison Researchās āThe Infinite Dialā blog. Ever wonder what Clear Channel's version...
Read moreSean Ross is a radio business researcher, programming consultant, conference speaker, and a veteran of radio trade journalism at Billboard, Radio & Records, M Street Journal, and others. For more than a decade, his weekly writings have been collected in the Ross On Radio newsletter; subscribe for free here. https://tinyurl.com/mhcnx4u
This column originally appeared March 8, 2007, at Edison Researchās āThe Infinite Dialā blog. Ever wonder what Clear Channel's version...
Read moreThis article originally appeared on Edison Researchās InfiniteDial.com on Feb. 14, 2007. I was intrigued by today's news that Jim...
Read moreThis article originally appeared on Edison Researchās InfiniteDial.com on Feb. 8, 2007 Iāve been meaning to share this observation for...
Read moreThis article originally appeared February 3, 2007 on Edison Researchās Infinite Dial blog. Okay, many people believe that "An Inconvenient...
Read moreThis story originally ran on Edison Researchās InfiniteDial.com on Dec. 8, 2006. The AM station in question (later KXGM) went...
Read moreThis article originally appeared on Edison Researchās InfiniteDial.com on August 7, 2006. Of all the stories emerging from the recently...
Read moreThis article was originally published on Edison Researchās āInfinite Dialā blog on July 19, 2006 Even by the time the...
Read moreThere are two things about a late 1984 aircheck of WCZY (Z95.5) Detroit, that really stand out in 2023. One...
Read moreThe recent return of jingles to WLS-FM Chicago marked a turning point for both fans of radio jingles and TM...
Read moreHow do you choose the most provocative song added by prominent Classic Hits radio stations over the last year?Ā If...
Read moreIn previous years, some of the TV themes that listeners vote for on That Thing With Rich Appelās annual āTele-lectionā...
Read moreShortly after I derived the Lost Factor ā a calculation that measured how big a hit song was at its...
Read more