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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 7, 2012 13:43:26 GMT -5
MONDAY:
12am: Metal Mountain
2am: Royal Treatment Show
3am: Jeff Michaels Show
5am: Rock N Roll Sports
8am: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
11:10am: Classic Rock Music Journey
12:30pm: American Top 40: 2-9-74
3pm: Metal Mountain
5pm: Royal Treatment Show
6pm: Jeff Michaels Show
8pm: Rock N Roll Sports
11pm: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
TUESDAY:
2:10am: Classic Rock Music Journey
3:30am: American Top 40: 8-17-85
7am: Metal Mountain
9am: Royal Treatment Show
10am: Jeff Michaels Show
12pm: Rock N Roll Sports
3pm: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
6:10pm: Classic Rock Music Journey
7:30pm: American Top 40: 7-25-70
10pm: Metal Mountain
WEDNESDAY:
12am: Royal Treatment Show
1am: Jeff Michaels Show
3am: Rock N Roll Sports
6am: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
9:10am: Classic Rock Music Journey
10:30am: American Top 40: 5-9-92 (3rd Disney Show)
2pm: Metal Mountain
4pm: Royal Treatment Show
5pm: Jeff Michaels Show
7pm: Rock N Roll Sports
10pm: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
THURSDAY:
1:10am: Classic Rock Music Journey
2:30am: American Top 40: 2-9-74
5am: Metal Mountain
7am: Royal Treatment Show
8am: Jeff Michaels Show
10am: Rock N Roll Sports
1pm: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
4:10pm: Classic Rock Music Journey
5:30pm: American Top 40: 8-17-85
9pm: Metal Mountain
11pm: Royal Treatment Show
FRIDAY:
12am: Jeff Michaels Show
2am: Rock N Roll Sports
5am: Classic Rock Spotlight Countdown 1-19-85
8:10am: Classic Rock Music Journey
9:30am: American Top 40: 7-25-70
12pm: Metal Mountain
2pm: Royal Treatment Show
3pm: Jeff Michaels Show
5pm: Rock N Roll Sports
8pm: Classic Rock Music Journey
9:30pm: American Top 40: 5-9-92 (3rd Disney Show)
SATURDAY:
1am: AT40: Top 100 of 2003 7:30am: ACC- 9-4-76 10am: AT40: 12-6-80 1:15pm: AT40: 8-15-87 4:20pm: AT40: 7-28-79 7:35pm: AT40: 10-1-88 10:45pm: AT40: 8-15-87
SUNDAY:
1:50am: AT40: 7-28-79 5:05am: AT40: 10-1-88 8:15am: AT40: 12-6-80 11:30am: AT40: Top 100 of 2003 6pm: ACC- 9-4-76 8:30pm: Dr. Demento: 10-26-79 10:10pm: Bob Harris: Story Of Pink Floyd- Wished You'd Been Here
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 23, 2012 8:52:39 GMT -5
I still don't think its funny, but on Rock N Roll Sports this week, listen as we record WHILE the Red Sox blow a 9-0 lead to the hated Yankees. I kinda lose my marbles....
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Post by jlthorpe on Apr 23, 2012 10:23:48 GMT -5
Was that Top 100 of 2003 the last AT40 countdown Casey did before Ryan Seacrest took over? If so, I'm hoping to hear it. I'm also looking at the countdown rundown here: www.oldradioshows.com/at100/2003.html . It will be fun to hear Casey introduce the song at #70 (unless he pulls an "I Want Your Sex" and doesn't mention the title).
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 23, 2012 11:34:08 GMT -5
I do think so. Its the newest one we have and honestly I wouldn't play Seacrest for anything. Hell, I don't like playing Rick Dees, and somehow, he's better! lol
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Post by dukedeb on Apr 24, 2012 21:47:51 GMT -5
I still don't think its funny, but on Rock N Roll Sports this week, listen as we record WHILE the Red Sox blow a 9-0 lead to the hated Yankees. I kinda lose my marbles.... Gonna have to catch that!! Your new commercials with Randall are funny enough!
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 25, 2012 9:24:09 GMT -5
The first outburst is in hour 1 and the big bang comes in hour 3!
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Post by albe on Apr 25, 2012 19:55:04 GMT -5
Was that Top 100 of 2003 the last AT40 countdown Casey did before Ryan Seacrest took over? If so, I'm hoping to hear it. I'm also looking at the countdown rundown here: www.oldradioshows.com/at100/2003.html . It will be fun to hear Casey introduce the song at #70 (unless he pulls an "I Want Your Sex" and doesn't mention the title). Given the way the music changed since Casey started in the 70s no wonder he decided to countdown the AC & HOT AC formats.....Crap, Hip Hop, Explicit Titles, just wasn't his cup of tea.
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Post by dukedeb on Apr 25, 2012 20:04:49 GMT -5
I am surprised at how many of those type songs were in his shows. I thought the charts they used were supposed to filter out most Crap songs and such.
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 25, 2012 20:38:53 GMT -5
I thought so too, but apparently not so much. The early 90's stuff they began filtering out wasn't even remotely as offensive as the garbage at the end of Casey's run as host.
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Post by jlthorpe on Apr 26, 2012 8:26:41 GMT -5
I think the problem is that the late 80s/early 90s stuff that was considered offensive (like "Me So Horny" and such) wasn't getting much airplay at the time, so Casey's (and eventually Shadoe's) switch to airplay-only charts filtered out a lot of that stuff. By the early 2000s, that type of music WAS getting airplay (hence the song I mentioned at #70).
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Post by dukedeb on Apr 26, 2012 17:21:43 GMT -5
Ah I get it. So the mid to late 50s/early 60s and then the mid 60s and beyond was to rock and roll what the late 80s and early 90s and then the mid 90s and beyond was to CCrap. In other words, just as there was rock and roll here and there in the mid to late 50s/early 60s before it totally caught on with the British invasion in the mid 60s, CCrap was here and there in the late 80s/early 90s before it drowned everything else out starting in the mid 90s. Guess we can thank the Millenial generation for this? They were becoming adolescents starting in the mid 90s.
Hey I like that. When I type in wCrap without the w, it automatically changes to CCrap!
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 27, 2012 4:41:01 GMT -5
Thank the swearbot, I have alot of good ones in there! lol
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Post by jlthorpe on Apr 27, 2012 10:46:05 GMT -5
Ah I get it. So the mid to late 50s/early 60s and then the mid 60s and beyond was to rock and roll what the late 80s and early 90s and then the mid 90s and beyond was to CCrap. In other words, just as there was rock and roll here and there in the mid to late 50s/early 60s before it totally caught on with the British invasion in the mid 60s, CCrap was here and there in the late 80s/early 90s before it drowned everything else out starting in the mid 90s. Guess we can thank the Millenial generation for this? They were becoming adolescents starting in the mid 90s. Hey I like that. When I type in wCrap without the w, it automatically changes to CCrap! I guess that's part of it. I also think it has a lot to do with the acceptance of playing songs about being pimps, selling drugs, strippers, etc.. The early CCrap songs that became pop hits weren't that explicit, and the later ones that were were the ones I mentioned not getting airplay. I mean, there were some getting airplay (I do remember the song "Rump Shaker" getting airplay back in the early 90s), but I think a lot of the ones becoming hits weren't playing on pop stations (they were playing on hip-hop stations, I guess, but I don't think those were included on the charts used on AT40/CT40). When I was listening to radio in the early to mid-90s, there were three stations that were used by the Hot 100 where I grew up in the New York area - WPLJ (which became Hot AC pretty much), WHTZ A.K.A. Z100 (which shifted to playing more modern rock/alternative by the mid-90s before becoming primarily CHR again), and Hot 97 (which was a dance station that shifted to hip-hop). By 1993 I stopped listening to Hot 97, so my taste of pop music was limited to what played on WPLJ and Z100, and they rarely played hip-hop by the mid-90s (WPLJ didn't play any at all). By the late 90s, Z100 was playing hip-hop but I don't think it was the explicit stuff (stuff like "I'll Be Missing You" and "Men In Black" was what they were playing). By the early 2000s, I think CHR radio (and I have to admit, I wasn't listening to it as much by then; plus, I moved to the Washington DC area, so my familiarity with what their radio stations played is very hazy) had caught up with the explicit hip-hop stuff. I think 50 Cent was getting airplay, and Eminem, and their songs were more explicit than the Puff Daddy songs that the pop stations would play a few years before. And pop music content became influenced by hip-hop (look at Lady Gaga's songs).
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Post by dukedeb on Apr 27, 2012 17:28:26 GMT -5
All in all, a pathetic situation. To think such songs could become mainstream is hard for me to grasp. In the top 100 of 2001, Casey indicated that Nellie tied the Beatles for the biggest selling CD that year at 7 million copies sold. If that's not an indication of a generation gap in the musical public, I don't know what is. I mean did 10 people buy both CDs? It does prove that the teenage/young adult demogCraphic pretty much drives and governs the music industry for better or worse. If we had this discussion on the other board, all hell would be breaking loose (again)!!
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Post by morganmusicman on Apr 29, 2012 20:11:33 GMT -5
Well, due to my internet system crudding out, I missed the song at number two on this week's American Country Countdown flashback. Could you tell me what it was, and the chart action on that song for that week only?
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Post by Jeff Michaels on Apr 30, 2012 4:41:37 GMT -5
#2 was Johnny Rodriguez- I Wonder If I Said Goodbye.
Was #6 the previous week.
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