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Binghamton 98.1 The Hawk Voicetracked?

I am a big fan of 98.1 The Hawk, but I've noticed that most of their shows are either voicetracked from another station or from a syndicated radio show. The only local morning show on the station is Glenn and Traci, but even then, they might be playing the same songs as Curt and Samm (who are also voicetracked). It's actually a similar situation to iHeartMedia's "Premium Choice" stations where most DJ's are voioetracked from another station instead of live.

Was this because of layoffs from Townsquare Media or not?
 
I am a big fan of 98.1 The Hawk, but I've noticed that most of their shows are either voicetracked from another station or from a syndicated radio show.

How would you notice? The Hawk is the #1 station in Binghamton. It has double the share of the #2 station.

Was this because of layoffs from Townsquare Media or not?

I think this has been the lineup for a while. There probably isn't a lot of ad money in Binghamton.

Jess is on all of the Townsquare country stations. So is Taste of Country Nights.

They have a local PD. A lot of iHeart stations in markets this size don't.
 
I am a big fan of 98.1 The Hawk, but I've noticed that most of their shows are either voicetracked from another station or from a syndicated radio show. The only local morning show on the station is Glenn and Traci, but even then, they might be playing the same songs as Curt and Samm (who are also voicetracked). It's actually a similar situation to iHeartMedia's "Premium Choice" stations where most DJ's are voioetracked from another station instead of live.

Was this because of layoffs from Townsquare Media or not?

the music is not the same between stations airing curtis and samm and glenn and tracy... just checked.

Chrissy isnt local either.

We have a townsquare country station here.. studio is 40 miles away from city of license and there is nothing local on it. townsquare is a company that only cares about digital stuff and web clicks that happens to own radio stations
 
Radio stations have been sharing talent for over 35 years. The only change is listeners can stream out of market stations.

So listeners want radio stations to stay local, while those same listeners are able to stream anywhere.
 
I am a big fan of 98.1 The Hawk, but I've noticed that most of their shows are either voicetracked from another station or from a syndicated radio show. The only local morning show on the station is Glenn and Traci, but even then, they might be playing the same songs as Curt and Samm (who are also voicetracked). It's actually a similar situation to iHeartMedia's "Premium Choice" stations where most DJ's are voioetracked from another station instead of live.

Was this because of layoffs from Townsquare Media or not?
Was it because of layoffs at Townsquare? Well, it's because of radio's bigger economic picture that includes layoffs.

Radio stations don't make as much money as they once did. They're still making some but they have to keep cutting expenses. Nearly every big owner, iHeart, Cumulus, Audacy, Cox and Townsquare, has to cut staff. So if you're outside the very largest markets, most of the DJs you hear on your local station are voicetracked.

The question is, is it someone who is voicetracking specifically for your station? Their breaks have mentions of local things in your area? That's what you hope for. But often it's someone voicetracking for a lot of stations at the same time. How many Classic Rock stations owned by iHeart have Maria Milito doing middays and Ken Dashow doing afternoons? They're doing the same thing live on Q104.3 in New York but also going in another studio to record those same breaks for KIGL in Bentonville, Arkasnsas, WRKH in Mobile and dozens of others.

The funny thing is, iHeart just laid off one of the DJs who is heard live on WXTB in Tampa and dozens of other Rock and Classic Rock stations, a guy known as Big Rig. I guess even the voicetrackers are not immune from layoffs.

But I'd say most listeners don't have any idea the DJ they're listening to, who begins all his breaks by saying "Q102, Springfield's Classic Rock," is in another city and may never have been to Springfield.
 
Was it because of layoffs at Townsquare? Well, it's because of radio's bigger economic picture that includes layoffs.

The other option is to double the number of commercials. That's what it would take to make up for the difference. I think everyone feels they've reached the limit as far as commercials. Studio naming rights was the last option. So the only choice is to cut costs, because they can't increase revenues.

In any other business, you can "increase inventory." For radio, the only inventory they sell are spots.
 
Was this because of layoffs from Townsquare Media or not?

I don't know when it started, but that's been Townsquare's business model for awhile now. It seemed to start with Taste of Country and Pop Crush Nights, but it has since proliferated to other dayparts. Townsquare has also moved to a more centralized scheduling of music (again at least in some dayparts). Townsquare owns a handful of stations not far from me (though I'm just outside the listening area for most), and they don't have very many local shifts, though I believe both Townsquare clusters nearby have small local news presences.

How many Classic Rock stations owned by iHeart have Maria Milito doing middays and Ken Dashow doing afternoons? They're doing the same thing live on Q104.3 in New York but also going in another studio to record those same breaks for KIGL in Bentonville, Arkasnsas, WRKH in Mobile and dozens of others.

I doubt they're even moving studios to record those other breaks. At iHeart, any studio in the company can run any station in the company at any given time. I believe even home studios can do so with the right credentials.

The funny thing is, iHeart just laid off one of the DJs who is heard live on WXTB in Tampa and dozens of other Rock and Classic Rock stations, a guy known as Big Rig. I guess even the voicetrackers are not immune from layoffs.

Doc Reno was another voicetracker on multiple classic rock stations who was also live, or at least local, on WBGG-FM in Miami only to get buzzsawed in that last round of cuts. I actually worked with him in another market 20+ years ago. He was an interesting guy to say the least. He was a really talented guy who could be a little hard to suffer at times. The "Doc Reno sized Lysol can" was a running joke around the station for months after he left!

But I'd say most listeners don't have any idea the DJ they're listening to, who begins all his breaks by saying "Q102, Springfield's Classic Rock," is in another city and may never have been to Springfield.

Radio is definitely a passive medium, and I've always been told you should say at least your station name, if not also the station positioner, no less than 100 times an hour. I'm not sure most listeners even have any idea the DJ they're listening to, let alone where that person is. When I first started on-air, I was told the most important thing to remember is that almost nobody is really listening. So, if you make a mistake, just keep going. I gave that advice to a young lady I was training at another station some years later, and I heard her announce a song by "Hootie and the Blowfish" as "Hootie and the Bull***t," which is what she used to call the band. I was driving and nearly went off the road when I heard it, but she kept going like everything was fine, and she didn't receive any complaints (other than me giving her a hard time for it the next week).
 
How many Classic Rock stations owned by iHeart have Maria Milito doing middays and Ken Dashow doing afternoons? They're doing the same thing live on Q104.3 in New York but also going in another studio to record those same breaks for KIGL in Bentonville, Arkasnsas, WRKH in Mobile and dozens of others.
UH yeah, no.. they can do it all from the same studio.. its just logging into another automation system
 
I don't know when it started, but that's been Townsquare's business model for awhile now. It seemed to start with Taste of Country and Pop Crush Nights, but it has since proliferated to other dayparts.

The CEO of the company has been very straightforward about this. They are a digital first company. Those shows you mention are built on digital brands:

“By now, it should be very clear that Townsquare has transformed from a legacy broadcast company into a digital-first local media company. Digital is and digital will continue to be Townsquare’s growth engine.” — Bill Wilson , Townsquare CEO
 


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