Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:Why do people become firemen and policemen? Not because of what society offers the "talent".
Why do people become social workers and ministers? Not because of what society offers the "talent".
Why do people become career military? Not because of what society offers the "talent".
Why do people become artists displaying and selling their wares in some quaint resort town? Not because of what society offers the "talent".
Not everybody CAN be a "rock star" of the business world. Some people simply want to do something they do well and enjoy.... as the find their niche in this thing we call civilization.
As soon as the people with "investment banker" mentality get it through their head that a radio station is something more than a printing press for money, then maybe we can let the people who just want to communicate get on with providing something for the policemen, the firemen, the school teachers, the military personnel and the artists in quaint little day-trip towns. and the social workers and prison guards and the farmers and the veterniary technicians turn on the radio and just enjoy it... like a day at the beach or a walk in the woods.
jerry367 said:Going forward, who in the world is going to waste their life on radio, since it now has even less to offer talent than ever before?
SirRoxalot said:Where do you learn those skills now?
TheBigA said:Now, radio can pick and choose people who get it, and know what they're doing from scratch. They don't get training or development from the station, but from their own personal manager or consultant, who they've hired to groom them for their career. I'm not kidding. I know a bunch of radio people who are coming into the industry that way. It's not the 60s any more. But just because it's different doesn't mean it's bad.
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:I'm stumped my friend. Wind me up and point me in the right direction.
SirRoxalot said:Apparently, in the future, only very rich kids will have a shot at radio. I'm sure that the masses will relate well to them.
TheBigA said:They don't get training or development from the station, but from their own personal manager or consultant, who they've hired to groom them for their career.
jerry367 said:Just where are these beginner talent getting all the cash for such costly preparedness?
SirRoxalot said:By the time they have a "big and experienced team around them that will determine how their career will go", they've already invested a lot of their own time and talent into their career, and enough local success to get them noticed by the big boys.
SirRoxalot said:The fact is that great talents don't need the record companies anymore.
SirRoxalot said:Radio needs to recognize two things: It's inherently a local media, and it needs talent to separate itself from other content delivery systems.
TheBigA said:There is a whole new route for on-air talent that doesn't inolve sending demo tapes to PDs. It doesn't involve show meetings with overworked PDs that oversee 6 stations in a cluster. But it's off the radar. You won't see job postings through conventional sites. You need to know who to contact and what they're looking for.
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:I find it interesting that you do nothing in this post to help some 28-year old out there who hasn't quite found his/her "groove" in the industry.