I agree. If you are going to be a "Hometown Station" by all means you need to be Live and Local with your news, sports and community events. Horne radio, at one time, was billing WGAP as hometown radio. Strange thing is the studio's are in west Knoxville and all but mornings were by the bird and they let a local news Legend go to save a few bucks. Not the right way to do it. And yes who ever is reading the local events list needs to be in the community because when you go out on a remote the listeners and connect with that local person and know who they are dealing with.
> That was an interesting series. I started to add a comment
> to the Georgia string but it seems to have run it's course.
>
> There seemed to be two or three conversations going on there
> because people were using 'hometown radio' to mean different
> things.
>
> Saying on the air "We are hometown radio" don't do squat.
>
> One of the arguments was live vs. the bird, another was live
> vs. voice tracked.
>
> One ubiquitous feature on radio for years has been to give
> today's celebrity birthdays. I enjoy that. Does it matter
> is the birthday list is voice by a live person vs. a
> recorded person? a local person vs. someone in Kalamazoo?
>
> The Georgia group came close getting wrapped around the axle
> over questions like that.
>
> It would seem to me that 'local radio' has to be built
> around local events, local happenings, local names etc. If
> you can capture a script that says the blood drive is
> happening at the Methodist church from noon til 3 today, and
> the home coming parade for the Junior High will be on Main
> Street starting at 4, and that Mayor Jones was re-elected in
> yesterday's election by 70% of those voting, does it matter
> whether it is live or voice tracked, and wether it was voice
> tracked locally or e-mailed to that guy in Lincoln Nebraska
> for voice tracking.
>
> If the sound of Elton John's "Crockodile Rock" is the next
> record to be played, does it matter wether a local live
> person sticks a real CD in a drive, a local automation
> machine grabs it from the hard drive, it is captures off
> "The Bird" or what?
>
> Ooops. Sorry. Didn't mean to hog the soap box.
>