You've probably heard about the new "national" formats that Cheap Channel is instituting across the country as they lay off more local jocks. Jerry Del Colliano has been ripping on it for weeks. I heard one of the shows on Aggie 96 up in College Station last weekend.
Think of this as a cross between voice tracking and an 80's era Satellite Music Network format. You have a national jock who does generic breaks (no station name, no local references) a few times an hour, while Prophet drops in the station's imaging in the normal sweeper positions, with plenty of cold segs. The thought is that with PPM, it's not as important to get the call letters in all the time, so you just have a jock talk about generic artist info or what happened on American Idol the other night. As they lay off local talent, they cut and paste in one of these national dayparts into the Prophet log instead of paying someone to voicetrack it.
On paper, it sounds feasible. On air, it sounds really disjointed. The two generic talk breaks I heard had the jock using phone bits from whatever station he works at with any local references edited out. The station swept cold from a song into a stopset twice - no local sweeper or generic jock break, just roll the song straight to the WalMart spot.
I never thought that I'd say I'd rather hear voicetracking, but if this is the future of radio, bring on the tracks. If CBS didn't have KHMX now, you *know* this would be how CC would handle nights on Mix.
Think of this as a cross between voice tracking and an 80's era Satellite Music Network format. You have a national jock who does generic breaks (no station name, no local references) a few times an hour, while Prophet drops in the station's imaging in the normal sweeper positions, with plenty of cold segs. The thought is that with PPM, it's not as important to get the call letters in all the time, so you just have a jock talk about generic artist info or what happened on American Idol the other night. As they lay off local talent, they cut and paste in one of these national dayparts into the Prophet log instead of paying someone to voicetrack it.
On paper, it sounds feasible. On air, it sounds really disjointed. The two generic talk breaks I heard had the jock using phone bits from whatever station he works at with any local references edited out. The station swept cold from a song into a stopset twice - no local sweeper or generic jock break, just roll the song straight to the WalMart spot.
I never thought that I'd say I'd rather hear voicetracking, but if this is the future of radio, bring on the tracks. If CBS didn't have KHMX now, you *know* this would be how CC would handle nights on Mix.