The just hired a new PD for WDRQ:
And today WDRQ announced a new co-host for their morning show. So no format change likely:
The just hired a new PD for WDRQ:
Personally I haven't given up, but I don't keep my head in the sand either. If technology and consumer habits change over time, that's noting you or I can just fix. One has to be simply creative to hold onto the existing audience, while watching operating expenses.The unspoken meaning behind this paragraph is that radio is doomed due to being unable to peel Zoomer ears away from their personal devices. You're not even considering the possibility of a younger listener even fathoming tuning in. You've given up, it's over.
I don't know of any "professionals" here who have claimed "radio is dead", (other than maybe AM) nor have any of us driven radio into decline. Can't speak as to the other folks job responsibilities, but I know of no position descriptions that state the job is to stop the hands of time, keeping radio and consumer listening habits same as it was forty years ago. I think even you'd agree, that nobody could accomplish that task. Like any industry, you either adapt to the need, or you don't succeed.Why should we listen to professionals who have brought into the notion that radio is dead and continue to do the same things that helped drive radio into decline?
I don't think any of us have intentionally "talked down" to you. We merely pointed out that your observations and assumptions were inaccurate. Your feeling defensive doesn't change the facts.This is not a hostile question I am legitimately asking why people like you and TheBigA who keep talking down to us peasants like we're idiots feel like you're superior. All you guys come off as is the "We've tried nothing and we're all out of ideas!" meme writ large.
With the kind of rankings David brought to the discussion, I would hardly call that bungling. Clearly the number of human beings that are listening is definately important. Those numbers are determined via data, not via a couple guys on a radio discussion board who don't like certain songs or musical artists.At least Audacy had an idea. They bungled it badly but at least they had an idea beyond prolonging the inevitable. You guys have nothing but the same "data, data, data" repetition over and over without considering the humans behind the data. We're all just numbers to you, and that is why so many radio stations suck regardless of format.
That's what smartphones or before those, personal listening devices like IPods, Zoom's or other portable devices. You can build your own playlist! And yes, they've been around since the 70's. Remember the Sony Walkman? Neither BigA, David, or myself had anything to do with those.If we're going to be listening to some unthinking, unfeeling, impassionate machine, it's going to be what will play us what we want on demand not some aging Boomer's idea of what music we ought to be listening to.
That's one of the few things we can both agree on.People will choose the machine that will always give them what they want.
Alt is to Audacy what Nash was to Cumulus...a national "brand" that generates mediocre to terrible ratings in most of the markets where it is found.
So do you believe if a quality product is popular in Los Angeles, it wouldn't be popular in Chicago?In some instances, the shift to a unified brand has resulted in elimination of programming that some stations' audiences liked better.
Yeah I think a certain someone named Howard Stern disproved that notion entirely.So do you believe if a quality product is popular in Los Angeles, it wouldn't be popular in Chicago?
That is a very debatable subject.So do you believe if a quality product is popular in Los Angeles, it wouldn't be popular in Chicago?
100%. I think people are anathema to having networked music personalities because they aren't household names like, say, a Casey Kasem. Or a Ryan Seacrest in this modern era. Or Stern. Or Rush. You know the people, you'll be more apt to listen.We can go back to the changes CBS TV made a half century ago when it removed the shows it thought were to "rural" and not cosmopolitan enough; they traded Sioux Falls for LA and NYC.
Each market does have a different psychology due to things as diverse as climate, kinds of employment, education levels and ethnicity.
Fresno is not Birmingham. Rochester is not Albuquerque. Miami is not Phoenix. You will have a different percentage of partisans for different kinds of music and different formats and presentations. To further complicate, you will have a different competitive array in each market.
The web has made tastes more uniform nationally, but the composition of each metro area will influence the local impact of national formats and brands.
In retrospect, I now look at CBS's Free FM debacle as something 15 years ahead of its time, but utterly failed in execution, talent selection and format choice (Hot talk minus Stern? Good luck with that). The concept, however, remains sound.Miami is a good example of where rock or rock leaning formats are at a disadvantage; as one example, Power 96 has gone from a dominant station to an also-ran as it shed its local feel for a national approach. In such cases, big groups have gone from a Corvette to trying to relaunch an Oldsmobile.
I would submit that radio and TV are vastly different animals, primarily because of the visual elements. Radio can have skilled, popular personalities anywhere, yet these personalities would never have the same impact if put in front of a camera simply because they 'have faces for radio'. Viewers trust TV personalities and news anchors for more than just the familiarity of their voice.That is a very debatable subject.
We can go back to the changes CBS TV made a half century ago when it removed the shows it thought were to "rural" and not cosmopolitan enough; they traded Sioux Falls for LA and NYC.
But in my example, we're talking about major markets. One could argue the two markets are culturally different, but they're still major markets. Los Angeles has a much higher Hispanic population but other than population density, I doubt the other ethnic ratios are much different.Each market does have a different psychology due to things as diverse as climate, kinds of employment, education levels and ethnicity.
As with the comment about Ryan Seacrest or Casey Kasem, the arguement could be made that good personalities and appropriate music/programming mix plays in Peoria, or Petaluma. 99.8% of listeners don't care whether Seacrest is in their home town. Good, popular programming is just good for a reason.Fresno is not Birmingham. Rochester is not Albuquerque. Miami is not Phoenix. You will have a different percentage of partisans for different kinds of music and different formats and presentations. To further complicate, you will have a different competitive array in each market.
100%. I think people are anathema to having networked music personalities because they aren't household names like, say, a Casey Kasem. Or a Ryan Seacrest in this modern era. Or Stern. Or Rush. You know the people, you'll be more apt to listen.
To Steve's credit, he has maintained a good, long run in the public eye, with a wildly successful run as Family Feud host to boot. It has absolutely helped bolster his radio career.Steve Harvey is consistently one of the most popular radio hosts in just about every market that airs him. That's not 30 years ago. That's right now. But before Steve there were several other urban-oriented hosts who were bigger in their markets than any of the local hosts.
That is precisely how Stern made it in syndication... not because he was merely available, but because Infinity had Andy Bloom work as a consultant with the initial set of affiliates outside of WXRK to make his show accessible on that level. In fact, Stern's arguably most famous/infamous moment in general (and definitely in the Cleveland market) occurred at the WNCX "funeral" live broadcast that a WMMS engineer sabotaged. Yeah, he was a nationally syndicated host but traded ratings blows with WMJI's John Lanigan for the top spot right up to the end.In terms of alternative, iHeart has The Woody Show. It's not been a hit outside of LA, but I don't think the issue is that its syndicated. Some of these radio companies thing you can just throw a local NY or LA show on the radio anywhere and not do local promotions for it. If your local host was doing an interview with a big star, you'd promote it all day. These stations don't always do that when its a syndicated show. The syndicated host has to become part of the local team in every way possible.
Outside of Stryker and Kline (now minus Stryker), the talent being utilized by Audacy in country, alt rock and CHR aren't what I'd consider recognizable. They aren't being marketed or positioned as "the best of the best". And it comes off as a total disservice to them.
So do you believe if a quality product is popular in Los Angeles, it wouldn't be popular in Chicago?
As others have astutely pointed out, tastes vary by individual market.
Exactly. Maybe back in the 60's through 80's when consumers had their own handful of local station favorites, one could say that X-community was unique in music and personality tastes to Y-community. But that just isn't the way anymore. Since given the multitude of media consuming choices, whether that's for radio or TV, quality of programming has become more important than local-ism.And yet when I look at streaming playlists made by users not radio professionals, they typically include all of the same songs being played on radio stations in all markets big and small. I wouldn't overstate that music or content varies by market. Otherwise Sirius, Spotify, and all the other national services would be failures. There are certain local nuances that can be beneficial, especially if marketed well. Here comes another Texas Ten in a Row! But localism is not a guarantee of success.
Tastes in terms of GENRE preference definitely vary widely by individual market, BigA. Country music grabs 10 shares in DFW but only 2 shares in NYC, for instance.
iHM is allowing greater customization between its stations in the format these days,