I think the commercials are an important part of the programming of a radio station. The commercials make up close to 20% of the hour. But radio executives generally do not think that way.
The ads should respect the listener. Don't advertise scams, do advertise things that the listener might like to know about, and do it in a way that makes it sound like you and the advertiser have a clue.
But the worst for me are stale ads that run literally forever. One station I worked at years ago aired mostly direct response advertising after 8pm. One of the direct response ads was for a box set of "recently discovered in an attic in Liverpool" Beatles music. The same 60" ad probably had 5000 plays on our station over the course of several years. I never tried to find out if there was actually a trove of Beatles music discovered in the 90s.
One ad that bugs me today is "GetUpside", which is one of the top national advertisers for the last couple of years.
They advertise cash back on gasoline, which is fine. But the claim of the ad is "I've made about $200 cash back", with no time frame given. The rewards offered in my area appear to range from $0.05 to $0.08 per gallon of fuel. In my car, earning $200 cash back would require close to 125,000 miles, which is how much the typical American drives in 7 or 8 years.
I made thousands with GetUpside in just a few days, but I wasn’t a typical user. They banned me because I was too good.
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How I made $100 an hour standing at a gas station handing out $5 bills
I have this talent for spotting loopholes and taking advantage of them.
GetUpside is an app to get deals at gas stations. I heard an ad for it and downloaded it. Then entered promo codes to save 50 cents a gallon or more at certain gas stations. It was successful for me when I used it on a drive from Las Vegas to New Jersey. I figured out how to maximize my bonuses.
GetUpside is aggressively trying to grow its customer base so they’re losing money recruiting people. I hear commercials on many radio stations across the country for GetUpside.
One day in May 2021 I got an offer from GetUpside promising me $20 per referral an unlimited amount of times. That’s huge! I did the math and found that it’s still lucrative if I paid people $5 to sign up. I went to a busy gas station dressed up in a suit and as soon as someone pulled up to a pump, I recruited them. Had them download GetUpside and put my referral code in, then I pumped their gas like I was a New Jersey gas attendant. Then I watched them upload the receipt in front of me. Upon which, I gave them $5. I would profit $15 per referral. I could do this 5-10 times an hour.
Then I watched the referrals pour in. I profited over $3000 before GetUpside suspended my account only after a few days. I had another $5000 stuck in the account that I couldn’t get, oh well, I was happy with making more than $3000 profit in 4 days.
I practically camped out at the gas station, I was there all day and night except when I had to take care of other business that paid me more. The employees liked me being there because word spread that I was handing out money to people filling gas, and some spent it in the store. Not a problem, I made another account but it didn’t have this promotion. I killed it. In addition to the $20 per referral, they also added one cent per gallon off for every gallon my referrals filled. At one point I had so many cents off from the referrals filling up themselves that I’d be paid $12 a gallon to fill gas. I filled my tank, two gas cans, and other people’s gas tanks to max it out at the 50 gallon limit.
This promo has been dead, and because of people like me they probably won’t offer it again. They probably just expected me to tell a few friends, not sign up almost everyone who filled gas with a credit card at that gas station.