B
badbilly
Guest
Hello,
I feel we are missing the point here. If Bruce Morrow abandons terrestrial (ground) radio, he is admitting that the battle against satellite is lost.
Terrestrial broadcasters must also admit that relinquishing their hired talent, past or present, to satelite is giving up on the AM and FM bands.
Corporate America, including Infinity, may believe it doesn't matter. After all, corporations hedge on the future by investing in all aspects of the media, including satellite broadcasting.
But it will be years before the ratings shift to satellite, and the connection with the listener, the exact thing Brucie talked about after he was fired, is what will be missing from his new show. He will no longer relate to "Cousins" in Queens, or in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn, or to those on Staten Island. Rather, Bruce will brodcast to a horizon of listeners who never heard of him.
As the ratings disappear for WCBS FM, just as they did for their WNEW FM, Infinity will learn a great deal about the New York market, including this: It does not adapt well to change or any sort.
Bill James
Monticello, New York
Broadcaster since 1972
I feel we are missing the point here. If Bruce Morrow abandons terrestrial (ground) radio, he is admitting that the battle against satellite is lost.
Terrestrial broadcasters must also admit that relinquishing their hired talent, past or present, to satelite is giving up on the AM and FM bands.
Corporate America, including Infinity, may believe it doesn't matter. After all, corporations hedge on the future by investing in all aspects of the media, including satellite broadcasting.
But it will be years before the ratings shift to satellite, and the connection with the listener, the exact thing Brucie talked about after he was fired, is what will be missing from his new show. He will no longer relate to "Cousins" in Queens, or in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn, or to those on Staten Island. Rather, Bruce will brodcast to a horizon of listeners who never heard of him.
As the ratings disappear for WCBS FM, just as they did for their WNEW FM, Infinity will learn a great deal about the New York market, including this: It does not adapt well to change or any sort.
Bill James
Monticello, New York
Broadcaster since 1972