Callers can severely drag down a sportstalk format, especially when their takes are boring, rambling, idiotic, pointless, or simply pulling stuff out of their butts. Good producers/screeners can mitigate some of that, but are not always as effective as needed.Do you prefer a lecture or a conversation? The ratings show a conversation is preferable. Particularly to younger demos. To them, it's more like a chat group in social media than a radio show. The callers are only useful when they bring something different & unique to the conversation. Most callers don't.
It is extremely rare to have a host that has the encyclopedic knowledge and intelligence to pull off a solo show, a situation that demands some caller input.Radio companies are cutting staffs, primarily in music shows, not talk or sports. If two hosts are hurting ratings, they would be cut. So far, they're not.
Here in Houston the usually top rated sportstalker almost never takes any calls, instead encouraging texts to the station where the most interesting and insightful are read and referenced on the air by the hosts.
Outside of New York and a handful of other large markets, Sports radio does not rely on callers. Research showed that very few want to hear the poor takes from callers.There is less time devoted to callers when there are two (and sometimes three) hosts on a SportsTalk show. Multi-hosts are often tempted to talk among themselves about non-sports-related topics. I prefer listening to just one host.
Audio quality on most cell phones is horrible
Cell phone audio is quite good now that virtually everything is VoLTE and “HD Voice”. It’s rather the interface with the landline networks stations use that wreck the quality. If there was a way for the station audio board to directly interface with cell networks things would greatly improve.Audio quality on most cell phones is horrible
Those are examples of top quality hosts that are knowledgeable and can carry a show by themselves. But those shows are interview heavy, which fills a lot of time. Also at a national level calls are very carefully screened and selected as not to drag things down.Don't tell that to Jim Rome; Or even David Samson in the podcast world. They clearly are proof no multi-hosts work.
Depends on when the show is on. Multi-host talk sports talk segments becomes a bigger deal before or at halftime during the game.Don't tell that to Jim Rome; Or even David Samson in the podcast world. They clearly are proof no multi-hosts work.
Rome mainly uses tweets, emails and texts from listeners and doesn't take as many calls as he did in the past.Don't tell that to Jim Rome; Or even David Samson in the podcast world. They clearly are proof no multi-hosts work.
Rome mainly uses tweets, emails and texts from listeners and doesn't take as many calls as he did in the past.
Come to think of it, I'm not sure I remember the last time I heard a caller on our main sports talker. I must not have missed them.Outside of New York and a handful of other large markets, Sports radio does not rely on callers. Research showed that very few want to hear the poor takes from callers.
I believe the midday show has a few calls on Friday.Come to think of it, I'm not sure I remember the last time I heard a caller on our main sports talker. I must not have missed them.
I listen to WFAN and ESPN-880 which regularly give out the phone numbers. Many callers are quite knowledgeable and enhance the show greatly.
I listen to a small market sports talk show and often the callers have to tell one of the cohosts (who covers the teams) what time and against which opposing school the games are, it's both funny and sad. The cohost can name any character from a 50 year old TV show like it's nothing.Sure the audience and pool of callers is bigger especially in passionate sports cities. And Rome has a handful of callers who are funny/interesting too and he is always begging for them to call, but it is rare and a lot of the callers are not great at all.
Pick some smaller market sports station with a local show. Many of them lean heavily on callers and the callers are just awful.