Agreed. The 97 Rock apology reads like a corporate PR person ran it through a "make it sound sincere app" with the "remind listeners of our legacy" feature enabled.Lederman has been more proactive and out-in-front of this than the radio station.
Agreed. The 97 Rock apology reads like a corporate PR person ran it through a "make it sound sincere app" with the "remind listeners of our legacy" feature enabled.Lederman has been more proactive and out-in-front of this than the radio station.
That's Lederman's apology, which appears to be heartfelt and sincere both in writing and orally. The apology referenced in post #49 pertains to that which was read on the air Friday morning by a fill-in DJ, which is why the issue of having a GM or PD read it was raised.
The management is busy hiding in an office somewhere. Better still, the Pandemic lets them stay home.97's ops manager John Hager could very well have read the apology, too.
The majority of music formats can not be all inclusive. We know that different age groups like different styles of music. And among people of similar ages, there are social / cultural distinctions that may find younger people preferring country or alternative rock or hip hop or traditional CHR or regional Mexican or Reggaetón or some other musical form.The only reason Cumulus took action is because they lost some important advertising accounts. What percentage of this stations demographics are non-White? Not much diversity in the stale programming or the audience for this format...
Haven't you considered that they are truly sorry, embarrassed and troubled by what happened on their stations on their watch and are simply trying to show listeners and clients that this was not something that they approved of and that it was just wrong.Cumulus didn't do this only because some advertisers publicly said they were severing their relationship. Money determines Morality...
97 Rock is programming for Blue Collar White Men (Most over 50). Based on the Social Media comments I have read, many were not offended by the hosts remarks. Why did Cumulus terminate Lederman? He did not offend their base.The majority of music formats can not be all inclusive. We know that different age groups like different styles of music. And among people of similar ages, there are social / cultural distinctions that may find younger people preferring country or alternative rock or hip hop or traditional CHR or regional Mexican or Reggaetón or some other musical form.
Saying that there is no diversity in 97 Rock's format is disingenuous.
No, 97 Rock is programmed for people who like classic rock. They can be Hispanic, Black, Asian or even non-Hispanic whites. It's about the music and its appeal.97 Rock is programming for Blue Collar White Men (Most over 50). Based on the Social Media comments I have read, many were not offended by the hosts remarks. Why did Cumulus terminate Lederman? He did not offend their base.
That format actually does very well among Hispanics all over Latin America. Some of the big rock acts have had their biggest attendance records there.It's not disingenuous to say the format is not diverse. It isn't. Maybe some of the people at Cumulus were offended by the hosts remarks. That is possible...
I wonder how many ACTUAL listeners complained directly to the station about the comments. An ESPN reporter tweeted the audio and it went national. That put pressure on Cumulus Buffalo to act. 30 years ago, it may have gone unnoticed.Haven't you considered that they are truly sorry, embarrassed and troubled by what happened on their stations on their watch and are simply trying to show listeners and clients that this was not something that they approved of and that it was just wrong.
Interesting point regarding social media. So here's a theoretical question (note to Bolt, this isn't lobbying) : If the bit in question had not been promoted on the station's Twitter account and social media, or if it had not been presented as part of a podcast available worldwide on the Internet, might it have been gone unnoticed? Sure, some local listeners may have heard it OTA and been offended, but far fewer people would have actually heard it and complained in force about it. If it was heard only OTA, it might very likely have been a third party hearsay event ("somebody told me that some guy on 97 compared the shades of toast to skin color.") In which case, it very likely may have resulted in a small scale flare-up rather than a five alarm blaze responded to by nationally known figures.Pre-twitter and all social media, no way this would have become a national story. Plus the fact that people's understanding of what would be acceptable on morning radio was vastly different. Go back to some "hot talk" air checks from that era, say that stuff today, you are out of a job. It's a different world.
In which case, it very likely may have resulted in a small scale flare-up rather than a five alarm blaze responded to by nationally known figures.
Most people in the country had never heard of 97 Rock before this incident. The story went national creating more publicity. That really doesn't matter. The issue is one of Right or Wrong. Is it acceptable to make the comments he made? To me, his banter was crude, repugnant, and not funny. Other people disagree(again based on Social Media posts defending Lederman).Interesting point regarding social media. So here's a theoretical question (note to Bolt, this isn't lobbying) : If the bit in question had not been promoted on the station's Twitter account and social media, or if it had not been presented as part of a podcast available worldwide on the Internet, might it have been gone unnoticed? Sure, some local listeners may have heard it OTA and been offended, but far fewer people would have actually heard it and complained in force about it. If it was heard only OTA, it might very likely have been a third party hearsay event ("somebody told me that some guy on 97 compared the shades of toast to skin color.") In which case, it very likely may have resulted in a small scale flare-up rather than a five alarm blaze responded to by nationally known figures.
The issue is one of right or wrong. Is it acceptable to make the comments he made? To me, his banter was crude, repugnant, and not funny.
Obviously, the people defending Lederman found his comments funny. They feel he did nothing wrong. Most of these Morning Zoo shows don't play music in morning drive, so in essence they are Talk in that time slot. I don't get your point...That's being judgmental. There very likely are people who don't share your views. The real issue is: Was it entertaining? We're not talking about a talk station. We're talking about a music station. Why does someone say something like this on a music station. That's the real issue. Someone earlier mentioned the duo from Rochester. Same question. Why does someone say something like that on a music station? We might understand it on WBEN. But who thinks this is funny or entertaining?
I don't get your point...
Well played. It gets him out of Buffalo.He knew it was wrong. He said "I may get into trouble for this." So then why did he continue? My view is he WANTED to get fired. He's received more publicity for one little bit than he did in 25 years.
Of course, they're written by people who don't really know the market or the people involved.
Michigan Sandwich said:He knew it was wrong. He said "I may get into trouble for this." So then why did he continue? My view is he WANTED to get fired. He's received more publicity for one little bit than he did in 25 years.