D
DoubleC
Guest
99% of listeners do not know if a show is voice tracked. As far as syndication goes on My station in Albuqerque I get phone calls during Elvis Only from people who think Jay Gordon is in Town......That is My 2 cents
landtuna said:As previous posters have already noticed.....radio and TV are completely different when it comes to local vs national programming. Local TV entertainment is universally seen as less attractive than comparable national entertainment programming.
Music radio is almost the complete opposite even though there are and have been exceptions such as national shows like AT-40.
Judging from my own five children and their many friends DJ's today do not have anywhere near the same "connectivity" as the DJ's of old. This "connectivity" is what made local radio important over national shows.
Thankfully, no. If I didn't say so before I am speaking about music radio not talk/hate radio (which has entirely different attributes).
Apparently it was not always like that because I remember, admittedly in the days before "drive time", late afternoon and evening shows were the important part of an AM Top-40 portfolio. That's when the young generation got out of school and tuned in. Admittedly, there are more distractions to the younger set these days and maybe that's why evenings are less important.
And I agree with you that TK does seem to be a quality show, no problem with that. I am just lamenting the loss of what we used to have. It seems another departure from what once was exciting radio and something we'll never get back.
DavidEduardo said:In the case of KOOL, I think what we have today is an improvement...
DoubleC said:99% of listeners do not know if a show is voice tracked. As far as syndication goes on My station in Albuqerque I get phone calls during Elvis Only from people who think Jay Gordon is in Town......That is My 2 cents
landtuna said:This probably says more about your listeners than anything else. In my experience most listeners tend to be very knowledgeable about their on-air hosts.
DavidEduardo said:But you seem to approve of syndication if the show is likable to you.
There are plenty of good, successful radio shows that are syncdicated. In overcrowded markets in a recession, many of these shows give listeners real quality talent and programming when that would be impossible to achieve locally.
DavidEduardo said:Radio was different in the 50's and 60's because there was nearly nothing else besides radio. It's lots different now, and radio needs major national talent to compete in many cases.
DavidEduardo said:Significantly more 45+ and 55+ listen to talk radio than oldies... you have to put this in perspective. All folks over 50 do not listen to oldies. There are many formats older listeners use as much as or more than oldies, so oldies stations have to compete for the attention of those listeners with the best music and talent possible.
DavidEduardo said:In the case of KOOL, I think what we have today is an improvement... its just better radio. Who cares if it comes from New York or Wassila?
oldiesfan6479 said:Coming up: is Jack VTed from 7-8?![]()
KMGX said:The more syndication, the more homogenized stations will become; the more homogenized that stations become, the less potential there is to grow audiences in the ways that radio stations one did.
Terrestrial radio wants it both ways; they always tout how superior they are to satellite radio and yet more and more stations continue to bring in voice tracked shows, syndicated programs and cut staff--thus making their stations sound much less local and favoring their satellite competition.
I understand why syndication exists, I understand the business completely, however I also see that it's a business that shoots itself in the foot constantly and is a ship doomed to sink a very slow, painful death over the next 20 years unless there's a revolution--a reinventing of the business as it were.
landtuna said:Listening to a remote DJ might be just as enjoyable musically but it doesn't usually build the same fan appreciation. You need only to scan this board to see others saying the same thing.
DavidEduardo said:Radio will survive based on content distributed beyond the old transmitter on a hill model. Those with content will survive, and the content may be local, regional or national.
DavidEduardo said:The last place I would poll listeners is here. 99.99% of listeners have nowhere near the interest in radio as those who read and post here. In many cases, if something gets lots of support here, I know it is wrong...
Examples:
Long playlists (are better than short ones for us "olde fartes")
No Research
Focus Groups are useless
Local is always better than "good" (disagree, explanation below)
Dance stations are needed in every market... it is just that nobody has done it right. (who cares?)
My iPod has better music than any station in town. (true)
50's oldies will get huge ratings.
Oldies stations failed because the sellers were too young
Oldies stations failed because the buyers are all 20-something.
AM will get younger listeners if programmers are creative. (AM is dead except for Mexican and hate radio)
Programmers should not have to get management approval to change formats
Nobody wants to hear Brown Eyed Girl. (I do, and Maggie May too, but only in a large rotation)
landtuna said:Long playlists (are better than short ones for us "olde fartes")
Local is always better than "good" (disagree, explanation below)
AM will get younger listeners if programmers are creative. (AM is dead except for Mexican and hate radio)
I've amended some of your statements to reflect some of mine. But personally have never said any of them.
I'm looking at my personal preferences only and not from a business perspective. While I am not necessarily for or against remotely produced shows on radio I will almost always choose the local variety so long as the content is not significantly less. For instance, I am assuming there are a few AM drive shows "better" than the KOOL Morning Show but I continue to listen to KOOL because I have developed a relationship (albeit receive-only) with the characters. It might happen remotely were I to try but for now I am satisfied with the local show. Just as I support the local business owners in my area with my dollars I do the same with local talent and for the same reasons.
DavidEduardo said:You say AM is only good for "Mexican and hate radio". First, "Mexican" stations are in Mexico. And if you mean "Spanish language stations" please name me one well rated Spanish langauge AM in a top 100 market in the Southwest. Hispanics, much younger than non-Hispanic whites as a group, don't use AM just like under-45's who are not Hispanic don't use AM.
DavidEduardo said:And talk radio is not "hate radio." It's entertainment, like Leno and Oprah and the cable news and talk networks. But it does not work very well on AM, either, in the sales demographics.
DavidEduardo said:Again, long playlists fail when a station with a shorter list is an option. I have never seen a station win by playing more songs than a direct competitor. The average listener wants to hear many of their favorite songs each time they turn on the radio.
landtuna said:You say AM is only good for "Mexican and hate radio". First, "Mexican" stations are in Mexico. And if you mean "Spanish language stations" please name me one well rated Spanish language AM in a top 100 market in the Southwest. Hispanics, much younger than non-Hispanic whites as a group, don't use AM just like under-45's who are not Hispanic don't use AM.
I obviously meant "Spanish language" but since I am located only 100+ miles from the Mexican border we get both "Spanish language USA" stations as well as Mexican stations. I don't differentiate between the two.
DavidEduardo said:But you also did not answer the question... name me a single well rated AM that is in Spanish in the Southwest. You can't and that leads me to say, "don't say things that are fact based when there are not facts to base your statement on."
DavidEduardo said:AM is not for Hispanic audiences, as Hispanics like AM even less than non-Hispanics in the US.
DavidEduardo said:And, as to "hate" it's all from one's perspective. I find Opra et. al. very one-sided and exclusionist (if that word exists in English). In general, all talk radio and TV tends to be "my way or the highway" so that's not a criticism, just a fact. We like hosts... or people in general... we have things in common with. And we think the folks we do not have things in common with are wrong! It's human nature. And those differences make for entertaining radio.
landtuna said:Over the past few months I have spent significant time DXing the AM band. What used to be loaded with both local and far-away stations has evidently collapsed into 3-4 local English-language and tens of Spanish-language stations located who-knows-where. From my home in the SE Valley I can receive exactly two AM EL stations with a quality signal after the sun goes down. The remainder are either SL and/or smothered in static or bleed-over from other stations. .
Based on the above I stand by my statement that AM has, in effect, already died in my market and lives on life support in the two categories I mentioned. As I am not in the business I have no knowledge of their listener or revenue numbers and didn't make any statement to that effect. Nor, like most other people, do I care.