From Yahoo:
“'Tis the
season! Radio stations switch over to playing all Christmas music: Tradition is
'very important'”
Hear that? It’s
the sound of Mariah Carey rejoicing, as radio stations across the country agree
with the “All I Want for Christmas Is You” singer that it’s time to start
playing holiday tunes. Listeners of seven iHeartRadio stations in markets
including Los Angeles, Dallas and Charleston, S.C., have heard Carey, as well
as Elvis Presley, the Ronettes, Brenda Lee and all the rest, rockin’ around the
Christmas tree since Nov. 1. Eventually, 80 of the company’s more than 850
stations will switch over to festive tunes all day, every day through Dec. 25. It’s
just one of the ways that the “most wonderful time of the year” seems to be
arriving early in 2020, with Starbucks offering its holiday cups starting
Friday and stores greatly extending their traditional Black Friday sales.
(Walmart’s event is already underway!) Not to mention that the Hallmark Channel
began showing its beloved Christmas movies even before kids went
trick-or-treating.
As far as the
radio changeover goes, though, it’s actually not any earlier. An industry
source notes that some stations regularly flip just after Halloween. One reason
it might feel like it is though is that some stations brought back some holiday
cheer in small doses at the start of the pandemic. Jay Towers is the morning
show host and music director at Detroit’s 100.3 WNIC, one of the iHeartRadio
stations that did that. They’re scheduled to begin spinning Christmas music
full time beginning Friday — a full 42 days before we eat our last candy cane
of the season. “This past year has been extremely stressful for our state much
like the rest of the world with coronavirus,” Towers tells Yahoo Entertainment.
“So comfort and tradition right now [are] very important to us and our
listeners. We have gone as early as Nov. 1 in the past and as late as Nov. 15.
It’s always been about when it feels right. I think it was the right decision
to wait until after Election Day this year. Political ads were the heaviest I
remember... ‘Jingle Bell Rock’ would have had a tough time competing with
that.” Towers explains that, in the past, some listeners have criticized that
station for moving to a holiday format, which is something the station is known
for, too soon. This year is no different. “If you answer our phones at WNIC in
the studio, or check our social media you will see the outcry is massive [to
switch],” Towers says. “[Then] like anything else, the moment we flip, we will
get the ‘it’s too early’ comments.” Over on the Facebook page for Providence,
Rhode Island, station Lite Rock 105, there was a good number of those kinds of
messages, such as “let us get through Thanksgiving first” and “one holiday at a
time.” However, even most of the critics didn’t have a problem with some
Christmas music. They just wanted it rotated in with the rest until after
Thanksgiving. However, those people were definitely in the minority. Most said it
was a much-needed pick-me-up during the last stretch of this wild, often
devastating year. Detroit radio’s Towers, for one, is in favor of the carols. “Everyone
is pretty anxious to put 2020 behind them,” he says. “It’s nice to be at a
point now where our listeners can escape some of the challenges of this past
year for a few hours and enjoy Christmas music again.”
^ It is
November so I don’t see a problem with radio stations playing Christmas music.
^
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/radio-stations-playing-all-christmas-music-225217840.html
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