All Access:
WBZ also cuts ties with overnight talk host Bradley Jay.
So this last bastion of local overnight talk will be turned over to syndication now?
All Access:
WBZ also cuts ties with overnight talk host Bradley Jay.
So this last bastion of local overnight talk will be turned over to syndication now?
Is there quantifiable evidence of this, or merely anecdotal and/or personal experience? And if this is a legitimate factor in listenership, does it positively impact the profit margin of WBZ?
Radio is its own worst enemy. The more programming is cut the less people listen.
Most AM stations died as much due to the radio industry abandoning it and making a junkyard of garbage programs as anything else.
That's not true. Audiences abandoned AM for FM first. Once the audiences disappeared, the stations had no money for staff.
Years ago BZ cancelled Brudnoy in favor of syndie Tom Snyder.Reversed after listener protests.Then at some point WBZ eliminated Steve Leveille broadcast and Lovell Dyett show in favor of Overnight America which sister stations in St Louis (its home), Pitt. and Minn. also picked up.
Steve returned after listener protests but retired not long after.Dyett got a half hr in middle of the night.
Bay State Rock facebook group urging its members to write WBZ and try to reverse the decision.
That's why they're not cutting programming. People are being cut, but programming will remain.
That's not true. Audiences abandoned AM for FM first. Once the audiences disappeared, the stations had no money for staff.
Sounds like WBZ doing all news well past midnight?
Yes its not completely true BUT there is some truth to it. In this case you’ve got a station bringing in plenty of money but we cut anyway and work to get a negative feedback loop started. Same thing happened on plenty of other AM’s and once you lose the audience on an AM it is probably a lot harder to get it back.
That's why they're not cutting programming. People are being cut, but programming will remain.
That's not true. Audiences abandoned AM for FM first. Once the audiences disappeared, the stations had no money for staff.
"Plenty of money" isn't very specific. We know the revenue has been declining, while expenses have gone up. They've cut back a lot of fringe local talk left over from the CBS days, and it hasn't affected the ratings at all. The majority if the listening takes place during the day, and that remains local news.
The problem at WBZ is the audience is aging, and that isn't going to get better as time goes on. Because once the aging audience dies, there's no one there to replace them. You can hire all the staff you want, but that won't bring younger audiences to AM radio.
I thought their strategy was to get people listening to the iheart app, the youngins then are pulled in since its on their phone and iheart has content for podcasts to boot. Maybe that isn’t working.
So if BZ has an aging demographic issue on the AM band, then what is the excuse on the cape at WCOD where they cut the Dan and Stephanie morning show? Good ratings, lean run station and cluster already, FM playing hot AC so no demographic issue.
It depends on what content we're talking about. Putting content for boomers on new technology won't automatically yield a younger audience. It just gives the existing audience an alternative. You're an example of this.
Maybe you don't know, but they just went through bankruptcy reorganization. That completely changed the ownership of the company. The lenders now own the company, and they're trying to get some of their money back. So there are across the board staff cuts, regardless of audience. Once they cut expenses, the lenders will sell their share of the company to new owners. When the new owners come in, they'll likely have a new strategy.
I’ve heard all about it but I don’t care. They would get their money back a lot more effectively if they kept people listening to the stations rather than gutting the programming.