DarthDJ said:
Hey guys, I'm just looking for some opinions here.
I was in radio for 10 years, and was the APD/MD of my station before I left it. And when I did leave, I left it tied for number one 12+. (Take that WPAP! HAHAHA)
Anyway, is it just me, or is it painfully obvious that PDs just don't care about coaching any personality out of their jocks? OR...sitting them down and saying "you could have said that in less than 10 seconds instead of 30 and here's how...?"
People listen for the music, but a good jock can make the listener smile that much more. People are a PDs biggest assest, and it's like they just don't care anymore. "Here, read this liner when you talk."
I think every PD in PC needs to step up and coach their jocks to be better, show them how to do it better, and make it fun to for the listener again. All I ever hear is liner cards and badly set up phone calls.
Am I alone, or do you hear this mindless crap as well?
Yes, I'm resurrecting the original post of this thread--DarthDJ's call for PDs to do more/better coaching. Radioatlantis brought "education"--the formal kind--into the conversation... but we're all really talking about the same thing: teaching and learning the craft of being an Air Talent aka Air Personality, Jock, et cetera.
To quote myself (I think), being an AT is very much like singing or dancing or carrying a football. There's only so much that can be taught. Basketball coaches say you can't teach height. Likewise, you can't teach a deep voice. But you can teach a short player how to jump better... and you can teach a jock with a lesser voice how to use it better. And, yes, you can teach an AT to be concise, to focus on certain (relatable) topics, and appropriate pacing for the format.
My bachelor's degree in communications & master's degree in communications never hurt me as a jock. They probably helped get me hired, several times. What they represent, though--conscious thought & effort to be a better communicator--undoubtedly helped on-air. You know, that relatability stuff.
A bachelor's degree today is what a high school diploma was forty years ago: basic evidence that a prospective employee can think. I would not recommend to anyone that they don't need a college education to be a jock.
Last point. This education thing isn't a one-way street. If a PD isn't actively offering to coach you, then it's up to you--the jock--to encourage him/her to do so. Or, find that coaching/teaching elsewhere. The student needs to be an active participant in the process. Nobody's going to drill a hole in your head and just pour the knowledge in. You have to seek it out and grab it.
Success isn't something that some else does to you. Success is something you earn. As Nike says, just do it.