ThePickleReport said:
Mr. Pastrick will I'm sure have some enlightening comments on the FM talk subject.
What a set-up! I don't know about "enlightening," but I'll bite, although I think Tom Schuh would have equal or better observations because he's programmed
music radio, been an
account executive and now he's programming a
news-talk station. Why not PD's Al Wallack at WNED-AM or David Benders at WBFO? WNED-AM is on WNED-FM HD2. Is that getting any traction?
Strong points being made by Bob1370 about Buffalo radio, although I have a different take on WABC. Although the station may be syndicated, the programming originates in New York, a market where the hosts are known as "locals." Imus? Local and history at WNBC/WFAN. Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski? The jury's still out. Rush is the established conservative icon and Hannity was local before being syndicated. Mark Levin and especially Curtis Sliwa are perceived by NY-NJ-Connecticut listeners as local talent.
FM Talk or News-Talk in Buffalo? Well, as much as we on this board talk about
programming, it's really about
sales. Given the economy and reported decline in billing over the last six months,
sales is the critical factor. I doubt that any operator with music FMs is considering a move to fulltime talk. Maybe things will change a year from now, given an uptick in the economy and how music stations may be adversely affected by legislation that provides paying artists for use of their music. Sorry, my crystal ball isn't up to the test. Selling
music radio can present challengings in their own right. Selling
talk radio increases the challenge by at least 50%. The best sales people in music formats sometimes find it difficult to sell talk radio. I don't mean to be disparaging. In fact, the successful sales men and women at WBEN, WGR, WLVL and WECK deserve accolades for their performance.
Consider one of the objections a good sales rep often hears when selling local direct:
"The economy sucks, my business is down from last year and you want me to spend $5 thousand on a package?" Now imagine adding to that the agencies' objections:
"We're only buying top three in the demo, the cost per point has to be below $*** and we need a minimum of six no-charge promos a day... and a remote."
There are added objections when selling local News-Talk radio. Not only do you hear objections dealing with the economy, you get the time-honored:
"Your **** guy is a jerk. He said this or that and he pisses everybody off. He doesn't know what he's talking about. Women hate him. Nobody listens to him." This objection is sometimes heard when sales reps visit the PD to ask "what might be done" to appease a prospective client. It's a curious objection, given the client who doesn't want to buy the news-talk station is often able to quote everything the particular talk show host has said in the last three days. Yet
"nobody listens to ****." That's just the tip of the
sales perspective. On the upside, the response,
"You mean to tell me that all these people are talking about what ajerk **** but they don't listen? How's that work?"
The
programming perspective of FM Talk deals with "growing" the format (incubation period), hiring and developing talent and the performance of WBUF doing Talk. Considering flipping your music FM to News-Talk? You have to ask, "What's the demo? Who will we be competing with in demo and in format? Is there an easier way to make a buck? What's our margin? What's it going to cost us? Is there available talent? How much will it cost to sign them. What's it going to cost to promote the new format? How long can we wait for good numbers to appear? Can we sell on the if-come? Can we sell a weak book? Who's going to buy?" It's exasperating! The GM who makes the decision to flip an 8th place music format to local talk when there's no guarantee of appearing in the top ten after the flip is just asking to be sent packing. Yeah, I know, everybody plays it safe these days, but put yourself in the GM's position. Good, compelling, topical, enticing, opinionated local talk radio doesn't come cheap.
WBUF gave FM Talk a try. It didn't take. Argue those programming decisions and the effort all we want. It's not like WBUF-CBS had an endless supply of cash to hire live, local (Buffalo) talk talent, board-ops (an absolute essential) and news people. If you're a PD who's been through budget reviews, you know the drill.
Talk radio on FM? Shredd & Ragan have it covered. They work hard at doing it well. They're well-known. They do stuff that attracts and keeps listeners. They have a strong production staff with Josh Potter and Jim Jacka. The Edge sales staff
believes in them and the entire station from Morning Bull, James and S&R. How the hell do you compete with those guys in-format, in-demo? I've long thought that an FM station that could do what Shredd & Ragan do and combine it with the best elements of NPR's "All Thing Considered" would be a money-making, entertaining format. But then again it's a crap shoot and there are no guarantees. Programming an FM news-talk station against the Edge (to say nothing of WGR, WBEN and 97 Rock) would be a momentous challenge. If anybody decides to do Talk on FM, my bet is it will be an established talker like WBEN or WGR. Question is, on what frequency? Kiss and Star print money. 107.7? Maybe, but that'll be a tough sell internally.
Radio stations face great challenges these days. FM Talk? For reasons that should be obvious, it would please me to hear live and local FM
music stations 24-7. Any takers there? Maybe when the economy picks up.