Salem Media would say “hold my beer” but I suspect they don’t imbibe that drink.A filler format with 30 minute infomercials, not great to listen to, but hey, at least R1 could squeeze some more money out of 1110 in the meantime.
Salem Media would say “hold my beer” but I suspect they don’t imbibe that drink.A filler format with 30 minute infomercials, not great to listen to, but hey, at least R1 could squeeze some more money out of 1110 in the meantime.
And it takes months to build up sales even a little bit. I recall putting my first station on the air years ago and for 7 months we billed less than $50 a month!It's a programming placeholder with NO intention of seeking out advertisers.
When Steve Jobs introduced the iPod in 2001 we all became 'outliers'. I know folks my age who never listen to radio. That is because no radio station can play all the songs by a person's favorite artist. You can do all the research you want. You are just rearranging the deck chairs on a sinking ship.
Here we are, and not even at 6 weeks yet.6 more weeks this thread will have 30 pages, and no updates.
Using Old Time Radio as a filler format would be completely different, would possibly put 1110 back on the consciousness of the Charlotte populace and maybe get some press attention, and that could test a concept with possibly very little money? Are we SURE that Entertainment Radio wouldn't be a decent temporary format?
I think we're forgetting what a filler format is.
It's a programming placeholder with NO intention of seeking out advertisers. it doesn't matter you put on, but simply to keep the signal on the air with something listenable (gregorian chants if you want), instead of silence, which is a sure way to kill off a radio station for good. Silence=Death.
I know folks my age who never listen to radio. That is because no radio station can play all the songs by a person's favorite artist. You can do all the research you want. You are just rearranging the deck chairs on a sinking ship.
They could simulcast WWV. "All the time, all the time."
WVWA!!!I suggest as a format ...
NINE!!!!!!
Long before the iPod we had the Walkman which did the same thing with less sophisticated technology... and the need to carry a lot of cassettes with us.The iPod wasn't what did it.
Or recording it off the radio or from a friend's copy.While iTunes made personal audio devices easy enough that even technological illiterates could use them, they still required work and still required paying for the music.
The idea of curated playlists, delevered with whatever is the best technology, has its place, just as the video streamers have ad-free and ad content service.The difference makers were actually the arrival of the streaming services and mobile data becoming ubiquitous and affordable. At some level, radio will always exist; it just won't be AM and FM frequencies and transmitters forever.
I really think that "radio" means any system of audio delivery in real time... maybe even "on demand" shows and podcasts not in real time. There will be some form (or forms) of audio delivery well into the predictable future.I don't expect that change to happen in the near future, but broadcasting conventions have been showing off technology that made transmitters look bound for the scrapheap for about the last 25 years. When it finally hits, nobody will have any serious excuse for saying they didn't know it was coming.
WVWA!!!
RD's Scott Fybush even documented the history of the legendary WVWA. For the unitiated, please note the date for this Tower Site of the Week.One of my many friends in the business is Howard Hoffman, who was part of the team that produced that parody. On his birthday one year, I created an obviously fake (but close enough for the parody) license for WVWA Poundridge. He loved it.
WVWA!!!
One of my many friends in the business is Howard Hoffman, who was part of the team that produced that parody. On his birthday one year, I created an obviously fake (but close enough for the parody) license for WVWA Poundridge. He loved it.
RD's Scott Fybush even documented the history of the legendary WVWA. For the unitiated, please note the date for this Tower Site of the Week.
Site of the Week April 1: WVWA, Pound Ridge
LOL! I'll have to see if I can find that spoof anywhere.