yep, he flew to Dallas and Chicago every day at the peak of his career.Tom Joyner used to actually fly between his two cities.
yep, he flew to Dallas and Chicago every day at the peak of his career.
Its gotta be more common than what we are thinking of. But then again if there's multiple stations that person is doing its gotta be from voicetracking from the Iheart office, Audacy or Cumulus/Westwood offices. Yes I mean the most famous example Ryan Seacrest would do the show in Los Angeles for KIIS and Iheart stations around the country. He even did his Iheart show from inside the back room of Live with Kelly show when he was doing that show on TV. Sometimes his Iheart show and American Top 40 show is on location where American idol auditions were taking place at one point.How common is it these days for the same DJ or on-air personality to work a daily shift at more than one station in different markets? For example, doing 6–10 a.m. on weekdays at one station in Boston and then 10 a.m.–2 p.m. on weekdays at another station in a different city.
Kind of crazy when you think about it now. Even back then, he could have done his shows remotely--albeit not as easily as today.yep, he flew to Dallas and Chicago every day at the peak of his career.
As vw86 says, this is super common. In the Seattle market (12th ranked I think) one of the big Class C players, KZOK, is completely tracked from other markets. And fairly sloppy about it too- the bios for the various jocks reference where they actually are and often include email addresses for their other station. KZOK is an iHeart owned station, but all of the bigger players do this.
radioinsight.com
iHeart does this on a very large scale. To make it sound local, the jock records the name of the station/slogan 100 different ways and one of them plays before their voice track.
This, by the way, is a long-standing technique. ABC's TalkRadio in the 80s did that, along with the talent recording the local phone numbers. Later, AM Only/America's Best Music did the same thing...a pre-recorded call letter thing rolls, folllowed by the jock on satellite:
RECORDED: "960 KABL."
LIVE: "...with Nat King Cole's "Unforgettable. Before that, we heard..."
Which worked pretty well most of the time. Local stations just needed to keep their assets fresh and pay attention to the announcer schedule updates from the network.RECORDED: "960 KABL."
LIVE: "...with Nat King Cole's "Unforgettable. Before that, we heard..."
Owens, who has shuttled between San Francisco and Los Angeles each week for a year to reach both markets at once, has already broadcast his last show to Los Angeles. He'll be back in San Francisco next week to resume "The Ronn Owens Show" from 9 a.m. to noon on KGO (810 AM), the way it was for 22 years.
His Bay Area audience of about 375,000 listeners, who mostly stayed loyal, will be rewarded with a weeklong paean to provincialism.
"My first week I have planned in my head already, a salute to the Bay Area," Owens, 52, said by phone from Los Angeles, where he is vacationing and cleaning out his condo.
Owens first guest will be Mayor Willie Brown. Then he'll go right to the old topics -- the 49ers, restaurants, politics, traffic. On his first Friday back, he will answer listener questions as to why he went south in the first place, spreading his demographics at the cost of the local passions that have been his hallmark.