towercity said:Can't disagree about Sterling being weird. I don't think Dave Kaylor has the smarts for radio. After retiring he reported from the political conventions a couple of times and he cannot think on his feet at all. If he doesn't have a script in front of him he's lost (a lot of TV people seem to be that way).
Bob Hetherington is an interesting choice, I had forgotten about him. He's kind of a Kurt Ludlow type--solid, calm, composed. But then I started thinking about it and he's gotta be pushing 60 now. And therein lies WTVN's problem. Even if they start broadcasting on FM how do they grab ahold of an audience that isn't getting older and shrinking every day? Anybody like that seems like a quick fix. A recent Harris or Gallup poll showed that people watch a lot more TV and rely less on radio when they get into their 70s and older and that's only 5 years removed from the workforce. I think a lot of WTVN's listeners will hit 70 in the next five years.
So Sterling may be too weird for morning radio, I agree. Then again, if he picks up thousands of younger listeners it might help produce the audience shift that TVN simply must have to remain viable into the future. Nothing about their current format (on AM or FM) will do that.
Maybe I'm not thinking out of the box enough like you are when it comes to Sterling. I like Sterling, but I think I like Dirk Thompson even better. I like bombastic muckraking on occasion. It's a fine line sometimes between maintaining credibility and becoming a circus clown, but occasional ranting about something does get the blood flowing.
Doug Leselles is another one ... he still sounds great whenever I hear him on Catholic Radio.
Hetherington is 57, he had nice enough presence on TV and it's not like the old days where he would have to worry too much about ratings too much. (No CHR or Rock Wars anymore.) I could see him asking the types of questions Conners asked without getting too political but with enough talent to carry the show.
CC doesn't want to pay anybody anymore, I'm guessing that's why Conners is no longer there. (I heard Jeff Rapp congratulating Conners for a great career and for being able to go out on his own terms. Conners said, "Well, not exactly.") ... but they need somebody good for that slot. If you get one of these guys with real jobs during the day (like Dusty Rhodes in Cincinnati), and only make them work 3 hours a day, that might be the ticket to getting someone good in that slot.
I hear you about wanting to get a younger profile, but Conners worked in that slot. I didn't consider him "old" ... it's not like he talked about remembering when they first installed electricity or anything. He said little enough that he was still relatable ... I think if he started talking about his interests more (like Joel with the "Ford Guy" example I gave above), that's when people are unable to relate. I wasn't a huge fan of O'Malley, but I think he would sound good doing the same thing Conners used to do.
Like I said, for Hetherington or O'Malley, they could consider it like free advertising for their real estate businesses.
I wonder if rotating these guys would work ... in case radio doesn't pay enough to be attractive to any of them. Hetherington, O'Malley, Kaylor, Leselles, Sterling on separate days with Joel as producer being the constant.
Just thinking out loud, don't know if any of this is practical.