It sounds like you're speculating.
Read the Buffalo News story. It's all there...
It sounds like you're speculating.
Read the Buffalo News story. It's all there...
Corporate Radio has always operated this way. When the Bean Counters draw a line through your name, you're toast.
43 years of dodging land mines is an impressive run...
I did. They didn't offer him to VT the shift.
Go back and re-read it. They mentioned Voice Tracking and he cut off the discussion.
Several decades ago I was hired to rebuild a failing AM FM in a top 15 market. We closed it down and let everyone go because we would be off the air at least 3 months. The station had lost money for 6 years, so there was no legal severance requirement.
We rebuilt, and the directional AM required 1st Class operators at the site. We rehired them. But in 6 months we got permission for remote control with no 1st class operators required. The operators were all permanently let go.
You've always been a company guy and we trust you not to f-bomb David, his wife and the old man.
Hmmm, that's not how it works. If he retires, there is no severance. If he gets let go for no good cause, there is severance.
What drove iHeart into Chapter 11 was an ill-conceived and miserably timed LBO put together by investment bankers.
What drove Cumulus into bankruptcy was a poorly designed move into consolidated radio, with incomplete clusters and dying AM stations... with management that did not see that there was no light at the end of that particular tunnel.
In the midst of this, we had a recession, the creation of the smartphone and the introduction of the PPM in the big revenue markets. The survivors had to reorganize or reduce costs proportionally.
Bingo, bingo and BINGO!
Nicely done!
Here's the quote:
“They said something about (the shift) may be voice tracked but I didn’t want to go into it,"
So they didn't offer HIM the option of VTing it.
Staff changes are not generally "bean cutter" final decisions. They are done by management and often reflect changes in format, technology or sales opportunities.
Broke the news while he was still on the air. Stay classy, Entercom Buffalo.
We weren't in the room when the conversation took place, so we don't know what was said. Since they approached him DURING his shift, maybe they wanted to see if he would be interested in staying on part time. No one can blame him if he told Entercom to piss off.
Broke the news while he was still on the air. Stay classy, Entercom Buffalo.
Let me add: The biggest, most consistent complaint I read about stations that fire talent after their shift is over is the DJ wasn't allowed to say "goodbye" on the air.
Apparently, based on the timing of the OP, I can assume he said goodbye.
What's wrong with that? Should they have told him when his shift was over?
Ridiculous. Do you think in the minutes after he was terminated, he went on the air and said "Hello listeners, I've just been fired, but thanks for the memories". I doubt that opened the mic after getting the news. The story said he collected his stuff and was escorted out. That's show biz...
Once again, everyone says he's a nice guy, and a nice guy wouldn't do anything bad.
As I said, I base my post on the OP. I defer to him. You should too, since you obviously weren't listening.
You obviously can't read.
Since they approached him DURING his shift, maybe they wanted to see if he would be interested in staying on part time. No one can blame him if he told Entercom to piss off.