del_griffith said:
Monkey: Nicely written.
It would be interesting to see where the real erosion has taken place on 610. I have an article from the 80's where WBNS was in the dumper ratings wise, yet Jack and Dick had a fairly strong rating in the morning. Almost double the overall published share.
Del: Thanks for the compliment on my post and good point on wondering which program block is dragging them down, but I think it’s more than one block at this point. What is happening is like when you’re chopping down a tree. You take a swing of the ax, and the tree doesn’t topple right away, but take enough swings and sooner or later it loses enough structural integrity that it falls over.
So you start with a milquetoast market with kind of a progressive streak, but mostly in a good way. Add a bunch of people who grew up in Democrat households in NE Ohio, WV and Western PA. It’s also a market that is white and pink collar, full of government and creative class workers, and a little better educated than the average market it’s size. That alone makes this not the best market for conservative talk radio as it is currently constituted.
Then you start swinging an ax at all the full service elements that caused the station to be in the Top 3 for as long as anybody can remember:
1. Ax local talent or replace with journeyman talent - Joel Riley aka the Trent Dilfer of morning men; (Today Joel was talking about how his dad was always a “Ford Guy” and how his brother amazingly is into “Mopar”. Breathtakingly compelling conversation - truly cowtown stuff.)
2. Ax the news department.
3. Ax traffic.
4. Go heavy on syndication that plays more to the red state voter in a market that isn't loyal to either party for long.
5. Go heavy on paid shills, aka boring mutual fund shows.
Big Bear did things the same way. They started with Number 1 market share, then the banker guys bought them out. They started axing the Big Bear bakery, Borden milk products, quality meats and produce. They sold shelf space. They cut the help and raised the prices at the same time … one ax swing at a time until the entire operation fell.
del_griffith said:
As for a Rand Paul philosophy political host or populist , I think the move is away from that type of thinking. The tea party isn't dead. But it has lost a lot of power and public support from it's heyday in the advent of the passage of ACA. And when you really look at it, the real complaint from many wasn't a desire to return to fiscal sanity. It was some group is getting X and I can't get it so let's do away with it. Yes, there are some purists. But to a large degree, it's somebody is getting something I can't get so it needs nixed. Oh but don't touch my government preference.
Check out this summary of the recent article from Sean Trende on this subject. (Trende is a nationally known political number cruncher who writes for RealClearPolitics.com and he lives in Delaware County.)
http://washingtonexaminer.com/econo...reform-will-boost-gops-future/article/2533017
I don’t agree with everything in that article, but I think this definitely is the roadmap to attract the Reagan Democrat voter who has no love for either big government, government unions or Wall Street. And again, this is where the talk radio sweet spot is IMO.
Remember, for compelling radio you have to have something to make fun of or rant about occasionally … I think you have to have some kind of a boogieman.
That said, though you are correct about the rest: People want cuts as long as they don’t have to wait in line at the airport. Nonetheless, deficits aren’t free … they ARE being paid for because as each year passes the dollar devalues more and more. That’s why a Wendy’s combo used to be $3.29 and why it’s $5.60 today. There is no such thing as a free lunch.
knowbetter said:
redundant - everybody spouts the same stuff...listing to the same drivel is tiring...and makes for a narrow focused station. Things are not as hot politically, and OSU isn't playing, so...
I think it still goes back to the quality of the air talent. I like their Ohio State coverage, especially Earle Bruce’s feistyness and Jeff Rapp’s upbeat style. If only the rest of the day could be so interesting to listen to.
Nu_Roo_2 said:
One reason Rand Paul is not the right person to emulate -- especially if the intention is to seek a somewhat younger audience -- is that he is too socially conservative.
And at least Obama is a compelling orator.
You make a good point that the Christian angle is a bit shopworn both politically and in terms of it being attractive on the radio. That’s why I believe Glenn Beck is such a turn-off anymore … and I am a reasonably observant Catholic myself. Again, fighting the battles of the last generation and not so relevant to today, at least not on talk radio.
For me, Barry drones on and on. Nothing compelling about him at all.
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del_griffith said:
Is there really enough to talk about 5 am to 7 pm live and local and not just rehash the same stuff 13 hours a day? Yes, it can work when a big news story exists. But on slow news days, what then? Of if you take the Corby approach, how many ways can you discuss disaster vacations or farting on your first date before it wears out?
del_griffith said:
The topics you brought to the table would cover a few days and you're including stories that in some cases are old and stale. And in the process they would get old with listeners. Especially with the same callers with the same content in their calls.
I like what Ken Broo does on the weekends … a straight show about the Reds is kind of a snoozer. I like the fact that he plays significant segments of 80’s pop music, talks about the songs and the bands of the era. I’m not a big baseball fan, but I do tend to like his taste in 80’s music when I’m flipping the dial.
I also wonder if syndicated talk might work better if you had a better chance to interact. I wonder if the format could be changed so that local stations could cut away to give local callers a chance to respond.