Change is in the air for Boston radio

By Clea Simon, Globe Correspondent  |  April 21, 2005

In the old days -- two months ago -- listeners knew what to expect. 
You could turn on ''Mix" WBMX-FM (98.5) for fun new pop by Rob Thomas 
or Green Day and get the occasional nostalgic Bon Jovi tune mixed in. 
WBOS-FM (92.9) played it mellow but fresh, with the latest adult rock 
from Los Lonely Boys or the Wallflowers. And ''Star" WQSX-FM (93.7) 
was dance music old and new: Donna Summer meets Salt-N-Pepa.

Then, suddenly, they all started sounding a little similar and a 
little strange. Rock tunes ran into hip-hop, a current top hit segued 
into a '70s throwback. DJs were muted, if there at all, and everyone 
was advertising the playlist was wide open.

Are the playlists -- the formatting -- really gone? Not exactly. 
Boston radio may be putting more tunes into rotation, but they'll 
probably be tunes you already know. Because Boston, to varying 
degrees, is going ''Jack" -- a hot new radio format designed to win 
back listeners and snare a bigger piece of an ever-diminishing pie.

What is ''Jack"?

Put simply, it's a format that abandons the conventional wisdom that 
listeners respond to song repetition and station self-promotion. 
Instead, it substitutes a broad playlist of familiar hits that cross 
musical genres and programs them with virtually no talk.

http://www.boston.com/ae/tv/articles/2005/04/21/change_is_in_the_air_for_boston_radio/


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