Dados do primeiro semestre de 2005, compilados pela Interep e divulgados pela Billboard.
Dos 16 formatos analisados, eis as principais conclusões:
Jack Boosts Classic Rock, Country Up Too
August 16, 2005
By Chuck Taylor, Billboard Radio Monitor
Radio formats are changing. Country is roaring back, Oldies is bleeding audience share and Jack (the ‘we play anything’ format) is making Classic Rock sexy. That’s the radio landscape according to Interep’s format analysis based on Arbitron Spring survey data.
The study analyzed 16 formats and ranked their popularity with audiences 12+ throughout Arbitron’s 93 continuously measured metros.
News/talk/sports maintained its lead as the nation’s most popular radio format, with a 17 share, down from a peak of 18 during last fall’s political season. The category is dominated by News/Talk formats, followed by All-News, All-Sports and Business News.
Ticking up slightly, Spanish held second place, while reaching another record audience high and maintaining a year-long uptrend. The format is broken down into nine sub-genres—the most of any format—including Contemporary, Religious, Adult Contemporary, Tejano, Mexican, Tropical and Romantica.
Rhythm & Blues was the third most popular format, also showing a slight increase. Interep noted an audience shift from Hip-Hop to Adult R&B.
Off from its peak last spring and summer, Top 40 remained No. 4, down a hair. Declines have occurred mainly in the Dance segment of the format.
Adult Contemporary showed some erosion, tying for fifth place with a surging Country format, which gained .3 of a share for the second quarter in a row, for its highest performance in years.
Classic Rock was the hero of the Spring survey, rising to a 7.6 share, up from 5.9. The reason: Interep is including the proliferating Jack format in the Classic Rock format category. “Even though the format share total is higher,” Interep noted, “it’s really too soon to judge the performance of these evolving stations on a book-to-book basis.”
Oldies, on the other hand, posted its lowest share ever, falling from 4.6 to 4.3.Several prominent Oldies stations, such as Infinity Broadcasting’s WCBS-FM in New York and WJMK-FM in Chicago, have flipped to Jack.
Rock radio demonstrated a shift: The long-declining AOR (which includes mainstream rock) rebounded strongly in the Spring (3.3 to 4), while New Rock fell back (4.3 to 3.8).