Another great reply, John. Thank you.
For better or worse, I just don't see the Treasure Coast growing much more, especially relative to West Palm Beach or even Melbourne. The problem is that its population centers aren't clustered around one city. There's Stuart, PSL, Vero, and others. All are relatively small cities.
And speaking of the Miami market, I really miss Miami's talk radio tradition. Miami had unique local talent. He was controversial, but there's no one I enjoyed listening to more than Neil Rogers. There's no one like him on the dial today - no one with a fraction of his talent.
Much appreciated, Scott. I tend to be an eternal optimist. But deep down inside,I realize the Treasure Coast's local presence that does exist, on iHeart stations for example, will one day succumb to the inevitability of 100% syndication. It is what it is.
Yes, "Uncle Neil" was quite the phenomenon. Not only highly talented, but all his "inside radio" commentary, especially when the ratings came out, was priceless. I think it was when he was on WINZ-AM that he lifted the station to incredible heights. His show was #2 in the entire market just behind AC WLYF in midday. Imagine that! I guess that was in the 80s. After a while, the past is getting blurrier.
I'm happy to say I met him on numerous occasions. My late parents were racing fans. When I lived there and in all my visits we went to the old Pompano Park Racetrack's clubhouse. And there was Neil. We had some interesting conversations. Anyway, I digress but I have many wonderful radio memories of all my times in South Florida. Yes, there was a time S. Florida was home to excellent news/talk stations and they were LOCAL not syndicated.
I'd like to add a few thoughts about playlists. It's easy for all of us to blame radio management for what we perceive as deficiencies. But we also have to take into account the general public. First off, increasing numbers of people tend to have the attention span of a flea. They want instant gratification. The expansive specialty programming events we were treated to in the past, such as A-Z countdowns where thousands of songs were featured that took about a week to get through are probably in the more risk than reward category to do.
Over the years, I've spoken at length about one of my radio heroes. That would be Brian Thomas when he was at the helm of Classic Hits WCBS-FM in NYC. Each day, there was a feature. Most times it was just one song an hour that was highlighted that fit the theme. They were talked up with a factoid perhaps. But the circumstances for even something like that has changed.
I recall all these daily features were voice-imaged. That alone would be a financial difficulty for most stations to achieve. Countdown specials are difficult with voice tracking and syndicated programing in the mix. What I have noticed is there's that song that seems to pop out of nowhere and given a spin. These are the songs that the public likes enough but not to the point of hearing the song in a power rotation. It's better than nothing I suppose. Classic Hits WQOL engages in this. I've heard this type of thing in other Premium Choice formats as well.
Another thing we have to remember is skill sets. There are those who can take the company-ordained playlist and make something of it. Others falter. Some develop a true top down vested in success team. Others create dysfunction. Playlists are just one part of the many spokes in the wheel of success.