The "tweens" aren't getting their tunes from radio and the future looks worse than that flim flam in 1996 that sold the FCC on consolidation.
http://insideradio.com/
http://insideradio.com/
Bongwater said:First, do NOT focus on the HUGE "profits". They aren't there. Get over it. You can't measure things in $$$.
pbf1 said:Bongwater said:First, do NOT focus on the HUGE "profits". They aren't there. Get over it. You can't measure things in $$$.
Not sure what world you live in, but unless you're in one of the socialst countries, EVERYTHING is measured in $$$. Especially the management of multimillion dollar properties (radio or otherwise).
Bongwater said:I live on Earth in the People's Republic of Bellingham - a Socialist country if there ever was one. What's yours?
And the industry I'm working in doesn't need to radically alter it's model because it will always be profitable, will never go out of fashion and it's formula STILL works - beautifully. Headaches, yes, LOTS of them. But at the end of the day, I still have people interested in it and I know a computer can't replace me. And I don't need a consultant.
Mark Andrews said:And besides, CM, that's *exactly* how underground rock was born on FM in the late 60s.
Maybe there's an idea for dying AMs in there, too... Creative forces have been awfully repressed lately...
cm454 said:Bongwater is drinking his bognwater again.
If you let jocks do whatever the eff they want, it would be an effing disaster.
Talk about abstract music surrounded by nonsensical BS.
I know jocks think all they say is entertaining and important, but it often isn't and is a tuneout. Self indulging on the air is a great way to lose listeners.
There are only so many talented people able to hold and entertain an audience with their words---and collectively you'd be hard-pressed to find enough to staff ONE station in a market, no less many.
Sorry, thems the facts.
Bongwater said:Will the last person listening to CM's station please turn off it's transmitter when they're done?
Bongwater said:It kills me to think so many self righteous PDs have absolutely no faith in the people that work for them. And that attitude SHOWS on the air-PAINFULLY. There are a lot of good and talented people on the air that CAN hold and entertain an audience-did I say a LOT of them? But it's hard for them to establish themselves because we never get hear their true potential. And that is what ruins a station. Too much micromanagement from above. Do you think Pat O'Day, Larry Lujack and Steve Slaton (to mention a FEW) got to where they are by reading liner cards?
Bongwater said:If that was all there was to radio then, the industry would have been dead by 1990. Why do you think all these broadcast radio-alternative technologies like satellite, Music Choice, Pandora, webcasting and the iPod were created in the first place if terrestrial radio in the '90s to today was so damn good?
Bongwater said:It's attitudes like CM's that have created these very things that will ruin them if they don't snap out of it NOW and look at the bigger picture.
Bongwater said:There was a time when the most successful PDs mentored new talent. The new talent went on to become household names and when jocks were interviewed on who was their influences, their old PDs were often given credit in print for helping launch their careers. That alone made the PDs famous, not what was written on the liner cards. We've lost that somewhere along the way and we need to get back to the basics of good radio and that's making the jocks the centerpiece of the station. I am confident the jocks of today (as well as our old school legends) know their audience well enough to discern what they want and how best to give it to them in their own way. They just need the freedom to do it. And trust me, there is NO shortage of talent. The only shortage is creativity and innovation which is creating a shortage of listeners.