I hired a long time DJ come to work at WLBE when I was manager. He hadn't been a DJ in almost a decade, but he was an old AM top 40 guy from years gone by so he was a perfect fit. He came on air and introduced himself and then played three songs before saying another word. I was quite surprised and asked him about it. Best line ever - he said the music is the main course and the DJ is just the condiment. You can have the main course without the condiment - a hot dog without mustard or music without a DJ - but it isn't as good. Too much mustard is a problem too, so the best DJs know how much mustard is the right amount of mustard. Made sense to me.
Good analogy. Jim sent out a memo when he was PD at SMN/ABC to his jocks. The memo contained 2 words - "WORD ECONOMY." Jim is a master of doing personality radio but doing it in the most efficient "use of words" form. A lot of jocks just like to hear themselves talk and chatter and chatter, and everyone in the room giggles. Jim has always said with show prep, he knows how he will get out of a break before he ever begins it. If someone in the room chimes in with something funnier, he hits the button and into the music he goes. Some jocks have egos too big to enable them to do that. They want to have the last laugh, but it ends up not being good radio because listeners do want to get back into the music. They enjoy some chatter, but many jocks don't know where to stop. The listeners want the relationship with the jock, the connection, but they are there to hear the music (of course unless it is is a talk show.) Then contrary to this is when a station doesn't allow the jock to use personality in a show and it does become a watered down, "vanilla" (as Avid put it) show, more like a "that was..", "this is.." intros without any creativity. What's exciting to Jim about to new WW1 GTO show is that it will be personality driven and Jim is a pro at knowing how much is too little and how much is too much. Watch (listen) and see what he will do with it. He truly will bring back the fun that Avid says has gone away in radio. I have no doubt about that...but again, I am his wife and am biased.
Additionally, Jim has also always been the conductor in the room in any morning show environment, but not so "needy" as to have to be the one with the best punch line. And in using the phones, often the listener gives him the golden egg, and he's back in the music. In today's PPM world brevity is vital.
btw- Jim, too has tried to help celebs break into the world of being a dj. For example, he worked wit Jerry Mathers, the Beave...in Leave It To Beaver and Jerry even said it couldn't work. That's nothing against Jerry. It was just a different, unknown world to him as compared to what he was used to with acting. Good points, once again David!
And, vtk'ing a show is not just punching out a few voice tracks in a matter of a few hours a week for anyone who knows how to do it right...unless of course they are just "phoning it in"
and don't care how it sounds.