• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Bob Bolinger to be out as GM of Clear Channel ????

Snarkin USA said:
Bob Bolinger to be out as GM of Clear Channel and replaced by Brad Samuel (at a reduced salary)
Two other P.D's to be out at Clear Channel, other P.D's will pick up extra stations.

Source: http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php?topic=109351.30

...according to second-hand gossip from some one joined this board just to shine Tony and Kris's apple.

Which is not to say it might not happen, but the rumor did come from someone with an ax to grind about CC San Diego management. Bob was always a nice guy at The Planet/KYXY place (although he seemed pretty detached from the programming department) but in a place like Clear Channel where local managers and PD's seem to have no decision-making power they probably could do just as well with someone cheaper who could just as easily pass along the directives from on high and following this year's leverage buyout of CC, the folks in charge have to suck even more blood from the local markets.
 
I worked for Bob when he was GM at the old Q106, and even though I was seldom there during business hours, thought he was a great radio guy. I ALWAYS made a point of coming by on Friday afternoons though for Bob's famous Beer Thirty gatherings on the patio. I wish him the best.
 
Bob_Hudson said:
Snarkin USA said:
Bob Bolinger to be out as GM of Clear Channel and replaced by Brad Samuel (at a reduced salary)
Two other P.D's to be out at Clear Channel, other P.D's will pick up extra stations.

Source: http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php?topic=109351.30

...according to second-hand gossip from some one joined this board just to shine Tony and Kris's apple.


if im correct snarkin has been around for awhile. just doesnt post 10 times a day every day. ;)
 
theharleyshow said:
I worked for Bob when he was GM at the old Q106, and even though I was seldom there during business hours, thought he was a great radio guy. I ALWAYS made a point of coming by on Friday afternoons though for Bob's famous Beer Thirty gatherings on the patio. I wish him the best.

I know this is slightly off topic but...
What do you mean by "the old Q106?"
Was there another Q106 that I am not aware of?
 
Garrett said:
theharleyshow said:
I worked for Bob when he was GM at the old Q106, and even though I was seldom there during business hours, thought he was a great radio guy. I ALWAYS made a point of coming by on Friday afternoons though for Bob's famous Beer Thirty gatherings on the patio. I wish him the best.

I know this is slightly off topic but...
What do you mean by "the old Q106?"
Was there another Q106 that I am not aware of?

I think "old" as in Q106 went in the air 21 years ago.
 
Bob_Hudson said:
Garrett said:
theharleyshow said:
I worked for Bob when he was GM at the old Q106, and even though I was seldom there during business hours, thought he was a great radio guy. I ALWAYS made a point of coming by on Friday afternoons though for Bob's famous Beer Thirty gatherings on the patio. I wish him the best.

I know this is slightly off topic but...
What do you mean by "the old Q106?"
Was there another Q106 that I am not aware of?

I think "old" as in Q106 went in the air 21 years ago.

Huh?
Do you mean Q106 as a Dance station?
 
Garrett said:

You may need a hearing test, Garrett.

Q106 was an OK station in a sea of music formats in San Diego. Outside of Jeff and Jer in the AM, there was no real hook to keep ears tuned. I'm sure there were a few that loved the station, but the key was "few".
 
The "Old" Q-106 under Eden's Broadcasting was IMO one of the greatest stations San Diego had. Murphy and McKeever, Anita Rush, the immortal Jo-Jo "Cookin" Kincaid, the station was incredible. Ownership changed, the music shifted focus, Jeff and Jer came over, and it was downhill from there.
 
sweetbabylee said:
The "Old" Q-106 under Eden's Broadcasting was IMO one of the greatest stations San Diego had.

Which goes to show how bad SD radio has been :)

I don't know - looking back at KCBQ at its peak, KGB-FM and B-100 in their heydays: these stations were all trend-setters (where do you think the "Q" in Q-106 came from?) copied nationwide.
 
I believe deep down that Bob has a good heart. Unfortunately he's now working for a company that is quickly tarnishing his reputation by treating people like dirt. He's been forced to make decisions he didn't want to make and if he's smart he'll look elsewhere before the ax falls yet again at CC San Diego.
 
Bob_Hudson said:
Bite Me Hard said:
...if he's smart he'll look elsewhere...

In radio there is no longer an "elsewhere."

There may be an elsewhere for Bob if he is willing to move elsewhere. There may not be if he wants to stay in San DIego, which he probably can through retirement. I would guess he's made enough money and can always become an agency guy, like Mike Stafford did when he "retired."

For many, there is no longer an elsewhere. Live talent is becoming an internet connection for someone willing to do the work without the benefit of compensation other than getting to keep their current salary, promotions people are getting cut to the bone because profits are thinning, and engineers are being required to handle more with less. Radio, except during times of disaster, has become irrelevant to most people, especially younger people, and older people aren't courted even though they have the dollars, but tend not to spend them readily.

This isn't necessarily the fault of the buzzards of San Antonio, although they certainly have done everything in their power to foster the environment. The real problem in the demise of the industry is the proliferation of alternatives, starting the cycle of lost listeners, followed by the lack of innovation, the homoginizing of the product, and the complete lack of response to the issues from the very non-creative people at the top charged with maintaining the medium.

What have we been blessed with in the past decade that would support radio? Fewer live talent, voice tracked juke box crap from outside of any market, formats designed for the multitudes produced from a central location with no local relevance, and the big bonus, HD. Big whoop. Why wouldn't I rather listen to my home programmed MP3 device? Hell, I can even get Rush on my time frame, not his.

HD. Not High Definition, but Hybrid Digital. We could have done this right and gone with Eureka, but that would have exposed the buzzards to too much competition. Can't have that. So to protect the existing analogs for as long as possible, the U.S. goes against the rest of the world and comes up with a bandaid digital that doesn't even approach CD (or as someone I know who has great ears says, seedy) quality and we attempt to thrust it upon our listeners with ugly table radios and car receivers that only work within a few miles of the broadcast antenna. Like, wow. Dood.

So now, as we watch the once mighty powers stocks fall below $1, and the employees see their very limited gains blown out from under them, we continue to watch the decline of the medium into mediocrity by the loss of more local and live people and the addition of some voice from elsewhere telling us it's now "ten past the hour" because the hour could be anywhere in six time zones.

But don't forget to get down to Best Buy and buy that quality HD table radio, if you can find a salesperson that even knows what it is.
 
RadeoEngineer said:
This isn't necessarily the fault of the buzzards of San Antonio, although they certainly have done everything in their power to foster the environment. The real problem in the demise of the industry is the proliferation of alternatives, starting the cycle of lost listeners, followed by the lack of innovation, the homoginizing of the product, and the complete lack of response to the issues from the very non-creative people at the top charged with maintaining the medium.

That sums it up perfectly. I wouldn't drop any change on the floor at the hallow halls of CC-SD. It'll be swept up and sent to Texas.

Also, don't bother with getting HDRadio at Big Box. The salesweasles there can't spell HD, and continue to this day, believe it is satellite radio. I outfitted my car with an iPhone holder and can listen to more stations, in stereo where available, and receive content fine in most areas.

Radio stations are not the cash register with an antenna anymore.
 
RadeoEngineer said:
HD. Not High Definition, but Hybrid Digital.

I know this is off the topic but, RE brought it up.

I cringe every time I hear a spot on the air about how, with an HD radio you can hear music in high definition. There's no such freakin' thing! The HD coalition could have branded HD radio better than mentally comparing it to HDTV.

Stepping off my box...

dr
 
Dr. o Fun said:
I cringe every time I hear a spot on the air about how, with an HD radio you can hear music in high definition. There's no such freakin' thing! The HD coalition could have branded HD radio better than mentally comparing it to HDTV.

"HD" radio was yet another solution in search of a problem: the quality of FM radio sound is not and has not been a problem for 99.9% of people, whereas the 720x480 resolution of standard definition TV became a real problem as screens got to be so much larger.
 
Media Hack Chris | SDR said:
I outfitted my car with an iPhone holder and can listen to more stations, in stereo where available, and receive content fine in most areas.

Radio stations are not the cash register with an antenna anymore.

For those keeping score, the iPhone is $399.00
http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2007/09/05iphone.html

But hey, I'm glad some of us have the money to blow, just not the average listener...
(Isn't the average listener what it is all about?)
 
The next generation is what it's all about and the next generation does not like radio and listens when it doesn't have a better choice. It's meaningless in a world with Limewire, YouTube, MySpace and cooler things.

Making it worse is radio's current trend to cutback local programming creativity even to their available listeners in the baby boom and Gen X age brackets. Nowhere does any major radio group have a viable plan to program and market to the next generation.

More radio is not what Gen Y wants. Less radio or no radio would suit a lot of them just fine. Radio has worn out its welcome with a generation that it let get away.

The new iTouch is only $229.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom