I have no proof, but my guess it was a budgetary move. If you notice, they have dropped several staff members, gutted the news dept, and weekends are pretty much all paid programs, syndicated shows, or iHeart podcasts.I still don't know why Seth was dumped when Bloomdaddy was brought in. The whole situation seemed weird to me.
I don't listen very often either, as their brand of politics is toxic and condescending, but yes, he and Carmen sound exactly alike making it confusing to the listener.I don't listen very often, but he seems to be OK. His voice sounds similar to his sidekick, so sometimes I don't know which one is speaking.
You're fine.David “Bloomdaddy” Blomquist was excellent mornings on 1170 WWVA, Wheeling, West Virginia. He had also spent years as a sports anchor at WTRF-TV, also Wheeling. His then-wife was a local anchor at a competing station, WTOV9 (Steubenville, Ohio). If TMI, I apologize.
Let's go back 40+ years ago. When people [mostly older teens/young adults] found out I was in radio, they went ga-ga and were excited to meet me.----I never brought it up, some friends always did.....and when I was talking with a friend in a mall back in 1982 some girl came up to me and "said "Excuse me, but you sound familiar....." She was trying to figure out where she had heard my voice before or if she knew me. I wasn't even thinking about my radio job and then it dawned on me. When I told her I was a DJ she said yelled "THAT'S IT! I listen to you!" and got all excited and wanted my autograph. I was sort of embarrassed because everyone around was looking at me and this girl gushing all over the place and figured I was some sort of pervert. No one ever did that to me before and I liked being anonymous anyways unless I was at a station function, which was rare. Fast forward to today, mention you used to be "on the radio" and you get a yawn and "who cares?" from most teens....actually almost anybody.Triv, Rush, Lanigan, Stern, Imus, and those like them had that certain "star" quality that made them legends. We are not likely to see such talents like that coming in to replace them.
It's more than just the inevitable passing of a generation. The number of young people wanting to become broadcasters is almost nil. They can see the chances of making any kind of steady, even modest, living in the industry have disappeared. Fewer people means fewer individuals in which that special "star" quality can develop. And the supply chain of new talent has been dismantled with the mass consolidation of stations and the elimination of local programming where that new generation could hone its craft. And even if such talent can navigate the chain, the now complete takeover of management by the MBA corporate crowd means no one will take chances on anything new or different, preferring to play it adequate but safe, paying attention only to meeting their budget goals.
An era has passed. Welcome podcasts, streaming, snapchat and Tik Tok.
But Vaudeville people are what made 1930s-40s radio so fun! They brought the gags and routines right to your room.It's like back in the 60s when an old timer would say that they used to be in vaudeville.
Agreed, but the biggest names in vaudeville who were household names back then are virtually unknown today. Point is, that you can be really famous in one generation and totally unknown in the next. This is now happening with all those great Cleveland deejays of the past. Today's young people not only don't know who these people were, but most don't get their music from radio anymore. And who can blame them? The music on radio is no longer picked by music aficionados on staff who wanted to turn you on to new sounds, but by "research" which favors the tried and true. Gone are music people like Billy Bass, Kid Leo and Denny Sanders or brilliant Programmers like John Gorman who kept up with new sounds and were not afraid to put them out there on the strength of their belief in the act.But Vaudeville people are what made 1930s-40s radio so fun! They brought the gags and routines right to your room.