I've wanted to know this as well.How does she do her show exactly? Is it actually somewhat live? Are the calls days old or actually recorded that night? Do all the affiliates play the same tunes or do local stations drop in their own music? Etc.
How does she do her show exactly? Is it actually somewhat live? Are the calls days old or actually recorded that night? Do all the affiliates play the same tunes or do local stations drop in their own music? Etc.
How does she do her show exactly? Is it actually somewhat live? Are the calls days old or actually recorded that night? Do all the affiliates play the same tunes or do local stations drop in their own music? Etc.
I always wondered about the music when a station would flip for Christmas. The show seems somewhat out of place when she says, "I'll pick a song for you" and a random Christmas song plays.
Besides the accurate explanation by Wimmex, keep in mind that there are several formats of music that are fed for the show. So the ones on a real time feed get similar content, but combined with different music. And some stations use both the music and the content, but it is fed to them and their digital system assembles it with no need to fill commercial breaks with "filler" if the station is not fully sold.
Delilah just gets the content, which her staff cleans, edits and produces into the bits that are actually run on the air.
And the Stations that do their own music get the individual bits by FTP, generally automatically, and they are put in the station's digital system, combined with the music logs and the commercial logs and broadcast.
some good info there. I wondered the same
I know before her show here in the Mankato, MN market they have John Tesh but its just bumpers. The music is the same 70s/80s music they play normally. Sadly they play the same batch of songs because 2 out of 3 days driving to work I heard the same song at around the same time.
I always wondered about the music when a station would flip for Christmas. The show seems somewhat out of place when she says, "I'll pick a song for you" and a random Christmas song plays.
Tesh is delivered with the same options as Delilah, but I think more stations use just the segments since his "live" show is fed in the same time slot as Delilah.
For the Delilah stations that carry just her talk/caller segments, the requests are included, so you have to schedule the music with those songs in mind.
But she picks out an appropriate song for the caller.both Tesh and Delilah are mainly delviered via FTP with just the talk segments, and the station plays their own music.. as noted by others.
But she picks out an appropriate song for the caller.
John Boy and Billy actually have music with the show. I don't know that they still have an oldies version, but they started out doing classic rock and then, when they realized their style would never work on a rock station outside the South, they added country so they could be on more stations. Some stations in the South do the country version.
Delilah used to air the same music on every affiliate. Then she used to do two different playlists in November and December as stations went all Christmas. Then she did a custom show just for 106.7 Lite FM in NYC. Eventually it became customizable for each station and she couldn’t take dedications for a specific song anymore.
This show took the localism out of radio. There used to be evening “love song” shows on AC stations that were live and local. Most of the callers were in the station’s coverage area, or they were dedicating a song to someone in the local area. The calls would air the same night, oftentimes within an hour. And the callers could pick the songs (as long as they fit the format)
A few stations still do it, Lite 100.5 in Connecticut and Magic 106.7 in Boston.
100.5 stopped in the spring when they had staff cuts.Delilah used to air the same music on every affiliate. Then she used to do two different playlists in November and December as stations went all Christmas. Then she did a custom show just for 106.7 Lite FM in NYC. Eventually it became customizable for each station and she couldn’t take dedications for a specific song anymore.
This show took the localism out of radio. There used to be evening “love song” shows on AC stations that were live and local. Most of the callers were in the station’s coverage area, or they were dedicating a song to someone in the local area. The calls would air the same night, oftentimes within an hour. And the callers could pick the songs (as long as they fit the format)
A few stations still do it, Lite 100.5 in Connecticut and Magic 106.7 in Boston.