I have noticed a change here over the years. People once talked about the people on the air and now it's all about the numbers. Maybe it's because there are so few real PERSONALITIES presenting music on the air. Sure there are good voices cutting perfect tracks that go into the AudioValut or whatever computerized sterilized hit machine there is. It's all just dull.
A relevant perspective.
Danny, Roberts, Sandy, Santella, Lacy, O'Connell, Norton and many others are retired, a few occasionally appearing on commercials.
Clint, Masters, Roddy, Armstrong, Berns, Shane and other personalities of yore have signed off, permanently.
"Personality radio," such as it once was defined, is not about long, drawn out shtick. Listeners ... aside from those who listen to sports or news talk ... have limits. The KB of the mid and late 60s halcyon days would get killed today ... although not as "killed" as KB's present laughable and embarrassing zero point one. Abysmal. What's the over-under? You can't get much "under" than a zero point 1.
Two minute bits that may or may not be funny, relevant or entertaining are tune-outs ... even in morning drive, which in the past provided greater latitude for such. Attention spans are shorter, entertainment and information options are greater. RDS gives us the artist and title; our dashboard gives us the time and temp; Youtube, Instagram, Tik-Tok and Facebook gives us pictures, humor ... and snark. "Alexa play" is, to younger demos, the new audio provider ... instant access, instant gratification.
The air talent's act needs to be informative, entertaining and well-packaged, laser-focued on subject matter or localism. And, oh ... sound like it's real, enjoyable and inviting. Piece of cake, eh. Hardly. Being a DJ isn't what it once was. The days of bells, gongs and whistles, wild-tracks and resident morning show laughing sidekicks are long in the rear view mirror. Being an air talent is more demanding than ever ... especially when the air talent is voice-tracking five stations in five different markets. It can be exhausting. Burnout much? This issue is real and has been discussed and debated by national and local media mavens more knowing than I. Voice-tracking is not going away ... ever ... radio, whether OTA or streamed, is in a tight, and getting tighter, corner.
Fred Jacobs recently blogged about the value of air personalities "sounding like they're having a good time" ...
genuinely having fun ... it's a key issue whether the DJ is live or voice-tracked. Voice trackers need to be good actors and sound "in the moment." It can be done, and the better voice-trackers do it well ... however, most do not. It's rote to them: Many voice trackers sound as if they're dictating stock quotes or a shopping list. The good ones go far beyond that. Voice tracking is here to stay, so the imperative is to make it sound as real ... and as immediate ... and entertaining ... fun ... as possible. It's not an easy gig.
All this reality noted, the days of "four and out the door" are over. They have been re-defined: four and out the door means four hours of voice tracking five four hour air shifts ... in different markets. All for $18 an hour.