Read it and weep... :-(
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bi...artmedia-layoffs-across-country-restructuring
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bi...artmedia-layoffs-across-country-restructuring
So far Atlanta has had 3 on-air casualties. Power 96-1: Terry J, and Alt 105.7: Wendy Rollins & Rich Sullivan.
I'm kind of disappointed about Terry. He did middays for a while but most recently was part of the morning show cast. He also occasionally handled weekend shifts. I thought he was really coming along and starting to sound good. And...he was local.
So far Atlanta has had 3 on-air casualties. Power 96-1: Terry J, and Alt 105.7: Wendy Rollins & Rich Sullivan.
I'm kind of disappointed about Terry. He did middays for a while but most recently was part of the morning show cast. He also occasionally handled weekend shifts. I thought he was really coming along and starting to sound good. And...he was local.
I really hope this isn’t a sign of the times with terrestrial radio. Most of my co-workers listen to some kind of streaming service.
I really hope this isn’t a sign of the times with terrestrial radio. Most of my co-workers listen to some kind of streaming service. Most of the ones under 30 don’t even touch FM radio or even know how it works. I love my radio and I pray this isn’t a sign radio could be dying off. I know it is so much easier to stream radio but it’s still nice to have the program come from the actual radio. I guess it’s what I’ve grown up with and I don’t want to lose. Radio frees up my smart devices and doesn’t draw any data. And it’s free.
Alt 105.7 is now running iHeart’s Premium Choice/Syndicated Alternative format. Unsure about jocks, but no longer local from what I hear on the stream.
The latest development is that local markets will have one on-air talent in mornings and even the general managers will be eliminated.
Premium Choice is not a source of syndicated real-time delivery formats. It's a computer system where all the work parts to a format are delivered to stations and, locally, the bits and pieces are assembled on the Zetta system and played on the air in accordance with the station's precise local commercial load and other things like traffic or weather and such.
In the new system, so-called "Centers of Excellence" will put together all the content and deliver the ingredients to the individual stations. The latest development is that local markets will have one on-air talent in mornings and even the general managers will be eliminated.
iHeart is betting that people don't really care about local talent and involvement, and they may be right.
David, you're talking about markets that were getting the Premium Choice product, correct? What you're saying is certainly not the case in Atlanta.
It appears that "Premium Choice" which consisted of show workparts is now going to be superseded or modified by greater hub and spoke delivery to local Zetta automation in all but morning drive (and only mornings in some markets due to revenue and advertiser demand).
Even the PM Drive talent at KOST in LA was dismissed.
Somewhere there was a comment that the centralization will affect the largest markets less, but I don't think that was necessarily an official statement.
This seems to be a "next step" in sharing talent... very few talents it appears... across many markets, delivering product to stations from hubs and letting the stations insert the commercial breaks locally.
The next step would be to run all stations totally from hubs, the way many TV groups have centralized regional master controls in one location.
I don't think this is the final step. They are clearing the deck for another move which removes nearly all programming from local studios and delivers it, spots and all, from the hubs.
It won't be a demise at all if their research turns out to be correct -- that millennials and future generations will want a free-flowing, constantly customizable soundtrack for their lives, unencumbered by songs that turn them off or other people's voices trying to make them laugh, sell something to them, or talk to them about the world outside their bedrooms, kitchens, work stations or cars.
The scenario you describe is how I envisioned iHeart under Liberty Media ownership. It does look like the scope of the firings has gone beyond what was initially reported, and that more major markets are starting to get hit. I'm wondering if there will be another phase once the dust settles from this one.
Radio was Bob Pittman's launching pad as a jock and then PD. Now he seems to be contributing to terrestrial radio's demise. I wonder whether what's happening at iHeart will be used as cover for Cumulus, Entercom and potentially even Cox to do the same thing.
Radio was Bob Pittman's launching pad as a jock and then PD. Now he seems to be contributing to terrestrial radio's demise.
Part of the problem is some of the local talent haven't really done as much local involvement and local engagement as they could or should have. I've preached about this for so long, that radio DJs shouldn't lock themselves in dark, windowless studios or hide behind velvet ropes at concerts. They should hang with the listeners and be more relatable. Engage with them in social media and personal appearances. Obviously an exception is the station in Des Moines, where listener protests have led to the staff being hired back. But I don't expect we'll see that in Atlanta.
Maybe. The other way to look at it is operating with huge debt loads and diminishing revenues is what's contributing to radio's demise. You can't hire & retain staff without revenue. So maybe it's time for radio to reinvent itself, as it did after the arrival of TV in the 50s. Prior to that, radio was built around national network programming. When that programming moved to TV, radio moved to local programming. So what iHeart is doing is returning to the national model.
Keep in mind this national programming is exactly what critics envisioned (or feared) 20 years ago when Clear Channel expanded to 1,000 radio stations after the 96 TCA. It's taken 20 years to get to this point. It didn't happen overnight.
My question is: What came first, the chicken or the egg? iHeart, and really all consolidated radio companies, have been moving in the hub-and-spoke direction for quite some time. And the product on the air, at least in my opinion, has deteriorated. So did this contribute to the revenue decline that now is requiring greater cutbacks? Probably some of the decline would have happened anyway because digital technology has changed our lives in many respects.