Bad news! All access is reporting that Pete Kennedy, Dave Kane, Dino and Marc Cronin have been let go at their respective stations.
Good luck to all!
Good luck to all!
The Voice of Reason said:Tell me is anyone really surprised at this announcement? I wonder if Wease is still complaining about his cramped studio on Mill Street now?
I think Entercom will be missing something else at these stations if they go the route of having a disc drive program these time slots at the two stations...LISTENERS!!!
JimPastrick said:Stunning! Dave Kane done after 27 years.
ThePickleReport said:Dave Kane is a Rochester institution. I wonder how fast he lands at Clear Channel? Today? Tomorrow? Monday?![]()
AndrewLawson said:It's difficult not to feel badly and have a sense of sympathy when good, long-time radio personalities such as those in Rochester are terminated. Guys who've spent a good part of their careers, if not their lives, on the radio (at one radio station) in one market deserve better. Dave Kane and Pete Kennedy were the better known personalities who were let go this week, but even the second tier players deserve recognition for their service. I respectfully wish them well.
Speculation about what would happen to CMF and PXY as well as The Zone, Fickle and WRRM has, over the last year, generated more than a few threads on this board with various opinions posted.
And it is here that my post turns cold. Why is it that everybody here is surprised by what happened? Are we surprised because what was expected to happen actually happened? Are we surprised because albeit talented men who earned large salaries (reportedly into six figures) were released by Entercom once the FCC and DOJ (tentatively) approved their purchase of the CBS stations? Didn't Entercom execute staff cuts in its Buffalo cluster in early November?
The outrage and sentiment expressed over the firings is easy to understand and justifiable. The surprise, as if we were caught off guard, is that some didn't expect these cuts to happen. Perhaps some expected staffers in production, promotions, traffic and engineering to take the hit, but employees in those departments most likely do not make what air personalities earn.
Did not more than a few posters speculate that Wease would be taken down a few pegs salary-wise, if not summarily dismissed? Entercom's decision to make Wease and his crew work in the same studio that is to be used by the rest of the airstaff was the first sign that Entercom has no intention of kowtowing to him and his crew. Expect more to come, it wouldn't be a surprise if Wease was offered a deal that cut his base pay and shifted his compensation to performance-based parameters wherein Entercom would (handsomely) reward Wease for being number one or two, Persons 25-54. More than likely, the salaries of Kane and Kennedy will be offset by Wease's salary. In this regard, Kane and Kennedy may have been cut in order to sustain Wease.
Let me ask the question. If your were being paid $100k to do middays and the company that bought your stations offered you the choice of being unemployed or taking a 50 per cent pay cut, what would you choose? If you were doing mornings and the company offered you a choice of being unemployed or restructuring your contract to a performance-based salary, what would you do. I'm not debating whether the offer is right or wrong, fair or unfair. Rather, I'm simply stating a scenario that is faced by more and more on-air talent every year. It's a rhetorical question.
In Buffalo, Channel 7, owned by the particularly insolvent Granite Communications, recently presented similar pay cut options to it's anchor team. Some, including anchor Keith Radform, accepted the pay cut rather than stand in the unemployment line. We all know that John Murphy chose not to accept and is in litigation to determine the duration of his contract's non-compete clause.
It's not my intention to rain on the sympathy parade but to pull the curtains back on reality and show the situation for what it is. Not long ago, a thread was initiated with a four year old post lamenting the problems in the business. More than occasionally, posters who have left the business opine that the business is in dire straits these days and the wolf is at the door. Guess what? The wolf isn't at the door, he's in the house.