Originally posted by french frank
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Originally posted by french frank View PostStop press: R3 has sickly RAJAR figures this quarter … again (1.908m, from Q-o-Q 1.933m, and Y-o-Y 2.062m). Percentage reach down from the magic 4% to 3% (I'd wondered whether 3.48% would be rounded up to 3.5%, to be rounded up again to the usual 4% - but RAJAR not having any of that nonsense).
Breakfast figures have held up pretty well (636k), and I'll assume Essential Classics has also continued to do well so … since the overall reach has been struggling to reach 2 million for four quarters in a row, what part of the day is losing the listeners? Is the solution to dumb down the rest of R3 to the level of the morning programmes?
[Thought on a use of the term Dumbing Down: it marks the relationship between the content and the supposed audience e.g. popular music could be 'dumbing down' if the audience is expecting classical music, but not if it's on a popular music station. A programme for 10-year-olds is 'dumbing down' if the expected audience consists of adult classical music lovers, but not if the audience is 10-year-olds.]
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostThis bucks the trend which is a drop away in this quarter from news programmes (hooray) with a noticeable decline even for the Today programme and a shift towards music (although that is likely to be musak). The newsroom people - their buildings are surely now enough to fill at least two London postcodes - said that it wasn't a case of like with like as last year there was election excitement. I am not making this up. You might like to check. But we know why Breakfast is doing better than the rest of Radio 3. It is usually on at breakfast time.
Purely guesswork, based on the very non representative forum discussion, but I would guess that evening concerts might be losing audience.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by antongould View PostIs this not a very brave assumption about EC ..... ????It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostIs it not also possibly offensive to those who are unable to speak?
The dictionary definition is: 'to make more simple or less intellectually demanding, especially in order to appeal to a wider audience'. I suppose the idea that something one really enjoys has been made simpler and less intellectually demanding with oneself in mind could also offend. One can't legislate for what people take offence at, though I do tend to put quotes around this term to indicate it would not be my first choice …It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostThis bucks the trend which is a drop away in this quarter from news programmes (hooray) with a noticeable decline even for the Today programme and a shift towards music (although that is likely to be musak). The newsroom people - their buildings are surely now enough to fill at least two London postcodes - said that it wasn't a case of like with like as last year there was election excitement. I am not making this up. You might like to check. But we know why Breakfast is doing better than the rest of Radio 3. It is usually on at breakfast time.
Breakfast is not 'better' than the rest of R3. Essential Classics has been having more listeners, though partly because, being a 3-hour programme, its listening figures are the aggregate number from 9am until midday. And R3 has a smaller percentage of listeners who are rushing off to work first thing and switching off at 8.30 or so.
This quarter is also the one where the recalculated population figures are used. So a programme which had a stable 100k reach for the two consecutive quarters will show a slight drop in Q2 because the reach calculation is based on the higher population figure.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt could be - which I was at some pains to give an explanation as to what 'people' mean by the term. I cannot be held responsible for its widespread use, any more than I am responsible for people saying 'alternate' when they mean 'alternative'. These terms tend to alter with time: I understand 'deaf' is now preferred to 'hearing-impaired', in my young day 'black' was certainly not acceptable for 'coloured people'.
The dictionary definition is: 'to make more simple or less intellectually demanding, especially in order to appeal to a wider audience'. I suppose the idea that something one really enjoys has been made simpler and less intellectually demanding with oneself in mind could also offend. One can't legislate for what people take offence at, though I do tend to put quotes around this term to indicate it would not be my first choice …
OG
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think so. The last R3 operative who mentioned the figures (last quarter) - not Lord S - said the programme had had pretty well its highest ever figure, around 800,000. This suggests that R3 is attracting the kind of listener who enjoys Essential Classics (and Breakfast), so what happens to those who don't like that kind of R3 (hint - overall reach is certainly not rising, so new listeners coming means old listeners leaving: one cannot assume a considerably higher mortality rate among R3 listeners than the population as a whole, unless R3 is the cause) ?
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Postbut if established R3 listeners are switching off or choosing not to listen to the morning schedule is it possible that they are not switching back on at other times,It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt is possible with one person I know … R3 was my last radio bolthole, and when I felt it had ceased to cater for me after 20 years, I turned my radio to the wall and … As you suggested, the routine was broken. But I am only one person, after all
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I've recently returned to 'Breakfast' on Radio 3, having tired of 'Today's Metrocentric obsession with the Westminster village. I have no problem with a wide variety of short musical items at that time of day, and enjoy Petroc's style of presentation, but by 0900, if I'm at home, I'm ready for something a bit more substantial and possibly challenging.
I will sometimes listen to CoTW and the Lunchtime Concert, and often tune in after the evening concert has finished to see what hidden delights have been inserted into the schedule to take us up to 2200. And that's about it, really.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostOne person but not necessarily the only....?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostNo. Even just one person confirms the possibility of your hypothesis being correct. And of course, it's not a question of how many people now listen to Breakfast/EC, but how many used to listen in the mornings and now don't listen to R3 at all.
The BBC has a problem whatever the causes it seems to me.
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