Re: Consultant?
> > Does this, from the first posting, sound like
> > it was intended to be a serious thread about
> > radio consulting?
> >
> > > It sounds like fun, traveling around
> > > the country delocalizing radio stations
> > > and turning them into jukeboxes with
> > > transmitters. Do you just hang your
> > > shingleand say "I'm a consultant now"?
> >
> > Were I a radio consultant, I'd call that a cheap shot.
>
> Yes, but I've seen a lot of serious threads start with cheap
> shots, so to your question above, my answer is "yes, it did
> sound like it".
>
> And your arguments, primarily with David, reinforce the
> impression that this was your intention.
MY intention?
I wasn't the one who started the thread.
I just added my impressions and an old joke that has
a lot of truth in it.
> Judging from some
> of the other posts (besides yours, mine, and David's) I am
> not alone in having that impression.
>
> Sorry, but on a message board, with no face-to-face contact,
> impressions are all we have to go on.
True.
On a serious note, DE has previously admitted that he
likes very few oldies. So, conceivably, a consultant
such as him may be responsible for screwing up
the playlists of oldies stations... expecting everyone
to share his likes.
DE has repeatedly said that people only like hits...
maybe because the people who like a deeper playlist
have alreadfy quit listening to shallow oldies
stations like Majic and stick to their CDs and LPs
and web radio. I have 176 oldies (from my CDs) loaded on
my PC now. I think that's more than DE thinks a playlist
should have. So then who needs radio?
That's why I don't have a lot of respect for radio
consultants and I thoroughly enjoyed that cheap
shot from I forget who.
Mea culpa and 73s from 954<P ID="signature">______________
Guest Deejay on WFUN, 1971</P>