What really is a tragedy to this 30 plus year radio veteran is that today's "hit" music has gotten
so "controversial" that you can't play it on a school bus. And, that a company sees an
opening to make some money providing a service that "local radio" which "programs to the tastes
of our audience", will not provide.
Funny...I thought radio's job was to serve the "public interest, convenience, and necessity". If your
station's music is deemed too dirty to play on a school bus, I think it's time to ask yourself if your
station is actually serving "interest, convenience and necessity".
OK, yeah. I'm almost 50. I know. I'm supposed to be "dead" by now.
Of course, I always got a chuckle out of CHR programmers who would say "we're not a teen station", blindly
ignoring that 20 or 30 share of teens the station would get each book.
Yes, our bus played the radio, too. Different stations. But if I didn't like what they were playing on a particular day, I just grabbed my transistor radio and put the earplug in my ear. I would never have been
so rude to demand that a driver "turn that *(^*%^$& off"!
But, I know what you mean. About a year ago, I DJ'd a high school homecoming dance. The theme for the dance was "Phantom Of The Opera" and the homecoming committee asked me to play "Music Of The Night" for the Homecoming Dance. I played the song and the students booed...me! Shouted at me to "turn that bull*** off!" It's the only time in 30 plus years of mobile events I have ever turned to a student and told
him, "The song was selected by your school's homecoming committee for this dance. If you don't like it, take it up with your fellow students! For God's sake, it's only 4 minutes long! You can live without hip hop for four freaking minutes!" You should've seen the look on the kid's face. He was speechless, and walked away.