B
BoredOp0930
Guest
My younger brother clipped this article out of the Chronicle-Telegram some time ago(I don't remember seeing it) and gave it to me yesterday-
"The name Clear Channel became shorthand for everything wrong with terrestrial(non-satellite) radio: lack of diversity, repetitious music, boring programming, too many commercials, censorship, jingoism, ad nauseam.
Writer Alec Foege's interest in the subject of radio in general and Clear channel in particular was piqued when he became aware of the uniformity of radio stations' programming during a longish family car trip. He wanted to know why the music was so bland and over-familiar. He begins with a brief history of Top 40 radio, the company that later became Clear Channel, and it's founder, Texan Lowry Mays. He knew nothing about the broadcast industry, according to Foege, but was a shrewd and opportunistic businessman who viewed radio as a unique industry with unparalleled potential for growth"...
The article goes on to say about how Mays sought efficiencies by eliminating various redundancies such as physical facilities, and management, administrative, and engineering staff. It continues with the downside of the cost-cutting becoming very apparent, earning the company the moniker of "Cheap Channel", and rightfully so, by the elimination of incumbent talent, promotion of lower-paid employees, and the practice of "voice-tracking".
The article concludes with a very brief summary about failed media mega-mergers, how Clear Channel itself is dissembling, and the vitality of radio as a local medium will likely never return.
The book in question is called "Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio", by Alec Foege.
Did anyone read this book, or see this article elsewhere? What is YOUR opinion? Do you agree or disagree?
"The name Clear Channel became shorthand for everything wrong with terrestrial(non-satellite) radio: lack of diversity, repetitious music, boring programming, too many commercials, censorship, jingoism, ad nauseam.
Writer Alec Foege's interest in the subject of radio in general and Clear channel in particular was piqued when he became aware of the uniformity of radio stations' programming during a longish family car trip. He wanted to know why the music was so bland and over-familiar. He begins with a brief history of Top 40 radio, the company that later became Clear Channel, and it's founder, Texan Lowry Mays. He knew nothing about the broadcast industry, according to Foege, but was a shrewd and opportunistic businessman who viewed radio as a unique industry with unparalleled potential for growth"...
The article goes on to say about how Mays sought efficiencies by eliminating various redundancies such as physical facilities, and management, administrative, and engineering staff. It continues with the downside of the cost-cutting becoming very apparent, earning the company the moniker of "Cheap Channel", and rightfully so, by the elimination of incumbent talent, promotion of lower-paid employees, and the practice of "voice-tracking".
The article concludes with a very brief summary about failed media mega-mergers, how Clear Channel itself is dissembling, and the vitality of radio as a local medium will likely never return.
The book in question is called "Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio", by Alec Foege.
Did anyone read this book, or see this article elsewhere? What is YOUR opinion? Do you agree or disagree?