Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
What you guys are arguing for by saying CEOs must never ever under any circumstances have their pay packages limited is a return to a civilization that tolerates.... no inaugurates... and thrives... on some new kind of 21st Century slavery!
That is certainly not what I said.
Everyone has a boss. That includes CEO's. That boss is the company BoD who have the responsibility to hire, fire and set compensation for the company officers. The BoD, in turn, takes a certain amount of direction from significant shareholders. Those are the limitations. For private companies the owner(s) have no such boss but they are limited by the prices, and corresponding profit, they can charge based upon free market competition.
I don't want my government involved in setting pay scales for non-government workers at any level.
Unlike during the slavery period every worker in the USA today has complete freedom to work or not work for any company he/she so chooses. The pay they receive is generally at some sort of industry and regional standard but they are free to demand more or accept less depending upon their particular circumstances.
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
And look at radio today. Would you advise your child to pursue a careers as a down-in-the-trenches worker-be voice actor or programmer? If you look at the changes of the last 50 years, describe for me that life of the non-ceo people in broadcasting (in whatever form it morphs into in this digital age) 50 years from now.
I advised my children to consider a line of work that they would enjoy and look forward to getting out of bed each morning. For one that meant the Marine Corps. For another working 100 feet in the air as an electric lineman. For the third working in a chemistry lab. None of those choices would have been mine nor a suggestion of mine but it is what they wanted.
I tried several times getting into commercial radio beginning as a 15-year old high school sophomore but lost my first gig to a university student. I eventually made it into naval radio but then took a turn once out of the service and into computers instead. I never lost my love of radio but the right stars weren't aligned for me. I had a very successful career in IT but did not recommend it to my children either because, like radio, it has changed greatly over the years and is no longer the great place to work it was earlier in its life cycle. Similar to radio from what current radio people are saying.
I couldn't begin to tell you what radio, if it exists at all, might look like in 50 years....or even ten for that matter. Change is happening at a fantastic pace and each week some new technology comes along that reshapes our world in some manner. It is pretty clear to me though that radio is in some advanced state of change, if not decline, and is no longer an emerging technology or growth industry. As such I would not recommend it to youngsters looking for a career.
BTW, I don't think the "digital age" is having an effect on radio other than, obviously, portable media players. If digital hadn't come along replacing cassette players radio would still have been affected by devices which could emulate radio without the elements people found offensive or undesirable. Digital devices have certainly made it easier and accelerated the pace though.