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Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message . .. In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: I know the name. I just don't believe the poster boy using his name is Orban. Go ask on ba.broadcast if it is really him. And what will be the result. Other handles coming back saying sure that's him? Well, this isn't about Bob, this is about you. The newsgroup regulars are well known and identified. None hide behind screen names, as you do. You mean like you for instance? I use my given names, Identify who I am frequently by reference or by link to my website. If I look for a Telemon or Telamon or Taliman or whatever, I get nothing of use. |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
On Oct 4, 2:22 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"D Peter Maus" wrote in ... . What Radio claims,...and I can speak with some clarity, here, having been involved in the process for a good chunk of my career, even up to this last spring,...is that what it does is dicated to by the public, based on focus groups, perceptual research, and music tests in front of listeners. And that advertisers and listeners respond positively. What Radio doesn't tell you, is that the focus groups are highly selected from 'desirable' listeners, as defined by advertiser requirements and expectations, Now that is a generalization that my fit one company, but in every experience I have, with a dozen research companies I have delt with, as well as our own, such a statement is, if not an exaggeration, a lie. Most listener research is done to best serve an existing format. So one picks mostly one's own listeners.... and generally, those who listen a lot (so they will know the music or format or hosts or whatever) and tries to find what will serve them better. Some secondary listeners are picked... those who may listen more to another station, but who also have enough interest in our station to know about the music or the programming. I have never heard the word "advertiser" mentionend in the recruit specs for a music test or a perceptual. The usual things a age (concentrated in the ages where aobut 75% to 80% of the station listeners are located) sex (in balance with Arbitron audience composition), ethnicity (a CHR in LA might do half and half Other and Hispanic), and a minimum usage of the P1 or P2 station under study to insure knowledge of the station music or format. Most radio researchers do not use focus groups. For music tests, most research on ongoing stations is several music tests a year, to determine what to play and what not to, and how often. Again, no advertiser involvement, and the sales department seldom even knows a test is done. and those focus groups of highly selected 'desirable' listeners, go on to form, or define, the essential language used in perceptuals that are used in determining the formatics, playlists and production elements of the radio station to serve the 'desirable' listener. I have never seen this done this way. You may have. If you did, it was done wrong. Focus groups are ´perceptuals, and perceptual research is based generally on a combination of neutral questions with attention on low interviewer bias. Most radio perceptuals are done on the phone, and are a combination of open ended, scaled and fixed response questions. The secret is in the cross tabulation of the hard data, like demos, and the frequency in each cell of a particular verbatim from an open ended question. Format searches are the broadest, usually done by playing pods of many different kinde of music and doing a question set on like / intent / availability and canibalization questions. I've done ones with up to 17 different pods, and also done ones where a follow up with blends of pods were tested. Music tests, themselves are comprised of highly selected listeners to respond to songs, for the purpose of determining playlists to serve 'desirable' listeners. The only desirable listener is the one who will listen a long time. The only filters are age, sex (are they where most of the listeners are), ethnicity, and hours of listening to that "kind" of music on our station or a very similar competitor. For example, WLEY in Chicago is going to test 21-39 year olds (that is where over 80% of listeners already are), 100% mexican (that is the format... Mexican music), 60% men (that is the balance for the format, for them and everyone) and mostly those who listen a minimum of an hour a day to them, or maybe 5 hours a week to them and 5 minimum a week to music on WOJO. There is nothing desirable or undesirable there... just a snapshot of the listener and potential listener, eliminating those who do not listen enough to radio to know the music... because they could not score it appropriately if they do not know it. Crest does not do research with people who wear dentures... there is always selection based on who will be the heavy users of any service or goods. It's a closed loop. Created to meet the needs of advertisers first. And then attract the advertisers 'desirable' listeners to the radio station. No such thing. I have participated in well over 100 tests from vendors, and have done close to 1000 projects myself, as well as an equal or greater number of call out cycles and a few hundred perceptual projects. None has ever had the word "advertiser" attached or implied. Formats are specifically chosen to meet an advertiser's need. No, the only place this comes into play is in the knowing that there is no revenue in 12-17 or 55+ so we don't even look for that kind of format because it is not viable. Nowhere in the process, is the concept of 'serving in the pubic interest' apparent. Even ascertainment, at most of the stations I've been involved with, has been done with a closed loop. Finding out what songs the listeners want to hear is not serving? Finding out what topics and content morning and talk show listeners want is not serving? Finding out how often and what roads are important for traffic reports is not serving? So, Roy, it's a lot more than just a Radio believing it has the right to be paid for it's product. It's more like Radio believing the public exists to serve Radio and Advertising. And to select what will be and will not be acceptable for it's listeners, by manipulating its own research. That's just plain BS. You started with a false premise that audience research is something that it is not, and took it from there. Jim Collins, in "Good to Great" said the hallmark of good research is that it produces something that you don't expect. The hallmark of GREAT research is that it gives you something you don't like. The main purpose of music testing is to get rid of the stiffs. In talent testing, it is to get rid of negatives. In staiton testing, it is to find defects and correct them. That is the whole purpose of research... enhance the good, modify the bad. Radio has neither been surprised, nor disappointed, with its research, since John Sebastian ruined KHJ. I can take the best research and make a crappy station. Research is a tool. I can take carpentry tools and ruin a lot of fine wood too. It's also about the skills of the station staff. Listen to how David Gleason presents his case...all based on numbers that are highly selected, and highly interpreted. Numbers, which themselves are based on responses of individuals that are highly selected. No, they are not selected. If I say AM listening in LA is 17% of the total listening, 12+, how is that selected? The Arbitron universe is not selected, it is as close as possibly to a totally proportional sample, where everyone has the same weight Which is kind of amusing. Because where Radio has dared to open the loop, risks have been high, but successes have been huge. We do that all the time, with the aid of research. My overnight guy from KWIZ in Santa Ana now has about 3 million daily cume on 40 stations. Our "it won't work" Mexican adult hits is now on 12 stations and #1 or #2 Spanish language. My "it won't work here" 100% local artist rock station in Buenos Aires was #1 in a month, front page news in the press, and had never been done before in a market with over 250 stations (more than 100 LPFM equivalents, for example). We look outside the loop all the time. It is usually the listeners who tell us where to look. Doesn't matter. You're BUSTED. |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
On Oct 6, 5:11 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: I know the name. I just don't believe the poster boy using his name is Orban. Go ask on ba.broadcast if it is really him. And what will be the result. Other handles coming back saying sure that's him? Well, this isn't about Bob, this is about you. The newsgroup regulars are well known and identified. None hide behind screen names, as you do. Do you post as David Eduardo there? If so that's a screen name as your real name is David Frackelton Gleason! I am using my two given names. The other two are surnames.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Using, hiding...whatever. We're not going to play your childish semantic games. |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: I know the name. I just don't believe the poster boy using his name is Orban. Go ask on ba.broadcast if it is really him. And what will be the result. Other handles coming back saying sure that's him? Well, this isn't about Bob, this is about you. The newsgroup regulars are well known and identified. None hide behind screen names, as you do. Do you post as David Eduardo there? If so that's a screen name as your real name is David Frackelton Gleason! I am using my two given names. You weren't given ****, oh faux one. You made that up circa 2000! |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message . .. In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message et. .. In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: I know the name. I just don't believe the poster boy using his name is Orban. Go ask on ba.broadcast if it is really him. And what will be the result. Other handles coming back saying sure that's him? Well, this isn't about Bob, this is about you. The newsgroup regulars are well known and identified. None hide behind screen names, as you do. You mean like you for instance? I use my given names, Identify who I am frequently by reference or by link to my website. If I look for a Telemon or Telamon or Taliman or whatever, I get nothing of use. Well get the handle right and you will see many references on the web. Gee how tough can it be to do this. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message . .. In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message et. .. In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: I know the name. I just don't believe the poster boy using his name is Orban. Go ask on ba.broadcast if it is really him. And what will be the result. Other handles coming back saying sure that's him? Well, this isn't about Bob, this is about you. The newsgroup regulars are well known and identified. None hide behind screen names, as you do. You mean like you for instance? I use my given names, Identify who I am frequently by reference or by link to my website. If I look for a Telemon or Telamon or Taliman or whatever, I get nothing of use. You make a lot of crap up including about who you are. My IP address is in every post I make. The city I live in is in my signature. There is not much anonymous about me. At least what you know about me is true, which is not something you can say about yourself Mr. Pretender. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
"dxAce" wrote in message ... I am using my two given names. You weren't given ****, oh faux one. You made that up circa 2000! I started using the "pair" of given names more frequently for the web, maybe around the time I first got CIS, which would be 1985 or 1986. The name was given me when I was baptized, though. It's on my original baptismal certificate. On my Cédula de Identidad in Ecuador, it was David Eduardo Frackelton Gleason Frackelton, as my "American" middle name is also my Maternal surname. You apparently, for all the DX you do, have never figured out that there are different naming conventions in different countries and cultures. |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 01:52:43 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... I am using my two given names. You weren't given ****, oh faux one. You made that up circa 2000! I started using the "pair" of given names more frequently for the web, maybe around the time I first got CIS, which would be 1985 or 1986. The name was given me when I was baptized, though. It's on my original baptismal certificate. On my Cédula de Identidad in Ecuador, it was David Eduardo Frackelton Gleason Frackelton, as my "American" middle name is also my Maternal surname. You apparently, for all the DX you do, have never figured out that there are different naming conventions in different countries and cultures. tobe honest he knows but he chooses to pretend he does not so he can attack you for something to devert atention for the real point (someone needs o state these obvious turth "aloud" every now and then) "one useless man is disgrace 2 become a law firm 3 or more become a congress" adams woger you are a Congress all in your own head http://kb9rqz.bravejournal.com/ altopia is never used by KB9RQZ nor is ever udsed on the usenet from anywhere but google posts from these sorucees are fakes and get ou the newly recovered KB9RQZ.blogspot.com as well G -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
On Oct 6, 6:52 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"dxAce" wrote in message ... I am using my two given names. You weren't given ****, oh faux one. You made that up circa 2000! I started using the "pair" of given names more frequently for the web, maybe around the time I first got CIS, which would be 1985 or 1986. The name was given me when I was baptized, though. It's on my original baptismal certificate. On my Cédula de Identidad in Ecuador, it was David Eduardo Frackelton Gleason Frackelton, as my "American" middle name is also my Maternal surname. You apparently, for all the DX you do, have never figured out that there are different naming conventions in different countries and cultures. d'Eduardo, Forget Foreign Documents written in a Foreign Language : What Does your California Driver's License and Federal Social Security Card have written on them as your True and Correct Name in the English Language ? facts are facts ~ RHF . |
Nightime Secondary Service Protected to 750 Miles
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... I am using my two given names. You weren't given ****, oh faux one. You made that up circa 2000! I started using the "pair" of given names more frequently for the web, maybe around the time I first got CIS, which would be 1985 or 1986. The name was given me when I was baptized, though. It's on my original baptismal certificate. On my Cédula de Identidad in Ecuador, it was David Eduardo Frackelton Gleason Frackelton, as my "American" middle name is also my Maternal surname. You apparently, for all the DX you do, have never figured out that there are different naming conventions in different countries and cultures. "David Eduardo Frackelton Gleason Frackelton" let's call you "David Eduardo Gleason Frackelton * 2" from now on. For short that would be DEGF II. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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