How do iHeart markets make the decision about whether programming should be local or Premium Choice? Now 93.3 is a good example. 10 years ago, the station (then called Coast 93.3) was largely made up of Premium Choice filler, including national jocks. Then, probably five years ago, all of Now's shifts became locally or regionally tracked and Premium Choice wasn't used. Over the last year, Premium Choice has made a comeback, and national jocks are tracking nights, overnights, and most weekend shifts at Now.
Why aren't local or regional jocks used anymore at Now, especially since those jocks all largely still work for iHeart? Is it cheaper to use Premium Choice than to have an in-house jock, or jock from a nearby iHeart station, custom-track a shift? I have noticed a similar pattern at B101, but B101 never fully moved away from Premium Choice like Now did in the mid-2010s.
As a listener and fan, I would much rather hear a shift that is tracked for the local station, not a nationally voice-tracked Premium Choice jock.
Why aren't local or regional jocks used anymore at Now, especially since those jocks all largely still work for iHeart? Is it cheaper to use Premium Choice than to have an in-house jock, or jock from a nearby iHeart station, custom-track a shift? I have noticed a similar pattern at B101, but B101 never fully moved away from Premium Choice like Now did in the mid-2010s.
As a listener and fan, I would much rather hear a shift that is tracked for the local station, not a nationally voice-tracked Premium Choice jock.