I don't want the 35-year-olds in my audience to think of me as as 'pops' giving the kind of advice that only 65-year-olds can understand.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
My audience has lots of people between 20 and 35, but there are always a few 60-year-olds, and it makes me happier than if everyone was 22.
I have an audience that goes from kids to seventy year olds.
I've become 40, my audience is partly the same age.
What I am finding now is that my audience is getting younger as I get older, which is a very good thing as you know - you don't want them to get older as you get older.
A lot of my audience are in their 50s. But they want me to pretend to continue to be pretending.
I've grown up with my audience; they're my age or older. Not a lot of kids are coming to see me.
I don't really think about what's 'age appropriate' for my audience because I think they can handle quite a bit, but I do try to think about what's honest and true to my characters who have grown up in situations where they've been taught to handle these things very carefully and that they're very powerful.
You're playing serious music, and you want to be taken seriously. When they get my age wrong on the program, I wish they'd make me older.
If your audience is young, it'd be youth culture, if your audience is older, it'd be older people, if it were senior citizens, it'd be senior citizen issues. So you try and hit the target audience.
I just want to be a great example to younger kids.
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