Steve Eberhart said:YES! That was exactly the point of this thread...to counter all the negativity on this board with a little something POSITIVE for a change.
returnofbongo said:Sorry if your feelings were hurt yesterday, Steve. But frankly, you and a select few remind me of the band playing on the deck of the Titanic as it goes down.
Oh, better yet, Kevin Bacon from Animal House, the last scene..."Remain calm, all is well".
I thought about what you wrote yesterday, I went to sleep last night, feeling goo. Wished for a pony...woke up, nope, no pony for Bongo.
I realized, wishing for things isn't enough. If you want change, you have to demand it... Like my main man Charelton said, "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not gonna take it anymore".
Radio sucks right now, oh but here is something positive, it doesn't suck any worse here....HEY, I DID IT, A POSITIVE ABOUT RADIO IN DALLAS...We don't suck more!
317C50KW said:Something good about radio?
The most obvious is that it stretches the imagination. Let's all thank Stan Freberg for pointing that out in the 1960's. Words mean things and can take you places. I honestly enjoy listening to the Rangers and Cowboys on the radio. I like the pictures Eric Nadel and Brad Sham paint for me with their words.
I'm writing this on Friday and in today's DMN sports section they list at least a dozen or so high school football radio broadcasts that'll be heard on stations in the metro. Most of these broadcasts are produced by independent entities who are buying the time to get them on the air. Sure, the quality of the coverage varies from slick to suck, but even if it is micro-casting, it's providing a service. And for someone willing to take the risk, hopefully it makes some money too.
There are only a couple that qualify but what about the experts that are on the air locally that provide useful and reasonably entertaining weekend programming. Neal Sperry is the most obvious. Sure he buys time for his show, but his advertiser and listener response easily vouch for his knowledge business ethics. I don't know if I'd go as far as putting Jerry Reynolds or Ed Wallace or some of the home improvement guys on Neal's level but they sure beat infomercials for diet supplements and bad financial advice!
We still have classical-fine arts programming on the radio here.
You're more than likely to still hear station imaging or promotion that's reasonably creative. The "bible" of that genre, the monthly "Radio and Production" magazine is published locally. Even in the uber-bottom line world the business is in today, it's amazing what you can do with voice, music, effects and creativity in 5, 10 or 15 seconds. Or less.
The industry paid tribute to Tom Merriman last month. If you don't know about companies like TM Productions or PAMS, you don't know a thing about Dallas and radio. Today TM Studios, Jam, Tony Griffin Productions and others still carry the torch.
I "borrow" my board handle from a product the company once marketed, and they've been bought and sold a bunch (including this past week!). But we should tip our hats to the folks on Buckner Blvd. at Continental Electronics. They were producing "heavy metal" long before it became a lyric in a Steppenwolf song. Let's not forget Marti Electronics and Autogram either. Oh yeah, they're long gone, but I'll tip my hat to the home of the 1st phone on Inwood Road, Elkins Institute.
(Elkins-that could be cool thread on the engineering board!)
And I'm willing to bet we have all made at least one great friendship working in the biz here in DFW. And as they say. that's "priceless."