I agree with Manny.
For the new show that I'm doing on Party Radio USA, my approach is to sound more "FM" compared to what I was doing elsewhere (due to limitations). It's sounding "FM" and coming off professional that will get the proverbial "suits" to take the Internet seriously. I may spin and intro the music, but I've also added a person (Kenyatta, formerly of Pulse 87 in NYC) with the latest gossip reports. I am also looking for a person do a segment called "Dance Music News" with the latest info on artists, DJ's, performances, club events, etc. It also helps to have the professional sweepers going, along with the artist drops, etc. Yet being that the "brand" is about new dance music, we can definitely go as deep and as "breaking" as we can with the product because that's exactly what the target audience expects. Nothing less will do.
Deep down, people want professionalism because terrestrial radio has set the standard and people are used to that, love it or hate it. If they want a "college radio" sound, then they would go for that sort of station, which is something that I don't want to do because dance fans, just like any music fan
DO deserve quality as well as content. However, being that I want the show to have more of a community feeling, since yes we
ARE a dance music community

,and at the same time retain that professional FM sound, we even have fans doing scripted "drops"

It's that personal yet professional interaction that keeps people glued and makes them come back.
Regarding the DJ, I have a one hour segment at the end called "DJ Spotlight" where I showcase an up-and-coming club DJ and let him/her show his/her skills off. We bring in a new up-and-coming club DJ each week and
WANT to help bring that exposure and get the audience glued, educated and loving what a DJ does...that's where the following eventually comes in.
My pride would be that if a DJ became HUGE and landed a regular gig elsewhere and becomes "competition" (I put that in quotes because I feel we're all "brothers and sisters" in the music rather than against each other) than we can say...hey, we brought that DJ on air
FIRST!

If my show can serve as that catalyst and people follow, no matter what region of the country they are in, then that's what matters. And heck, I'm happy to do what we could for that DJ
Quality does account for something, yet we can still be as edgy as we can with our music as well as club DJ's that spin it
