Now then... where is it you say we can get one of those famous Buffalo "Michigan" samiches? [/FONT]
Zorba's.
Now then... where is it you say we can get one of those famous Buffalo "Michigan" samiches? [/FONT]
NoAs a person who's had a few lunches at Zorba's in Depew (and after just calling the joint to check), survey sez:
The Zorba's Texas Hot$1.90Mustard, onions and our own Texas hot sauce (a mixture of ground beef and spices) simmered 7 hours to perfection.
I had narrowed it down to the Newhouse School or small Ripon College in Wisconsin before taking a different path. Back then, of course, it was not called by the Newhouse name.I chose Syracuse because it's close to Buffalo, but I can name many other student run college stations all over the country.
There does not have to be any negative perspective on using technology to make the product better.There are at least two places I know in Buffalo that will gladly make you one if you ask. As for real time radio, there are several stations that have people sitting at consoles all day with no VT, if that's how you want to spend your time.
I don't see why technology can't relieve the airstaff of the need to sit around waiting for songs to play out. "Real time radio" is sort of like a '64 Mustang: a fond memory, but obsolete in so many ways.
Beyond a stretch. You're working too hard to fit a round peg in a square hole. Ain't no such thing as a "Michigan" in Buffalo and The 716. T'ain't never been. Go into any dinner, restaurant, greasy spoon, sandwich joint, Ted's, Pat's, Louie's, Towne, Kosta's, Gramma Mora's, Mighty Taco (if you were here, you'd recognize those names and what they stand for in the community) ... whatever and say, "I'll have a Michigan." You'll get a look like you have three heads. Case dismissed. Now, let's wrangle about radio stuff. At least you're good at that.The meat sauce they put on their Texas Hot is Michigan sauce. With the chopped onions, it is basically a Michigan.
Ain't no such thing as a "Michigan" in Buffalo and The 716.
So what you're trying to say is that you really don't have a clue as to what's really going on here but you feel like you have to insert your opinions anyway.
One thing I've heard from people in Buffalo is that many have never lived (or worked) in other cities. Provincial is an accurate word. They think something is unique simply because they do not know anything else. 97 Rock has clones in many markets. The menu at McDonald's is largely the same anywhere in the country. The same can be said for Commercial Radio formats...This goes back to something I said years ago. There is very little that is unique to Buffalo, especially radio. That's why Steve Harvey and Rush Limbaugh are so successful. They've had interchangeable hosts at WYRK, and still get ratings. They fired the morning show at 97Rock, and the ratings increased. That's why KB gets zero audience today, even though at one time it was a powerhouse. If all you focus on how things were, you'll never understand how radio works today. Because I've worked in so many places, including upstate NY, I'm not distracted by those provincialisms that interfere with what makes something a hit regardless of where it's played. So as I said a long time ago, feel free to ignore me. I don't demand to be heard. We live in a world today where people lock themselves in their own silo, only hearing what they want to hear. I will say what I want to say regardless.
One thing I've heard from people in Buffalo is that many have never lived (or worked) in other cities.
You are confusing different people. That's not the current host on 107.7. Don't feel bad. Nobody else knows about that station either...That's Val Townsend's story. She was born & raised in WNY. When she got fired from WYRK, she thought her radio days were over. Then she got hired at 107.7. I'm sure the company thought a local host, born & raised in the area, would attract a lot of listeners who love that she knows the city, knows the street names, and eats Texas Hots. Unlike me, she has real local knowledge. So far it hasn't translated to ratings. But hey, it's only been a month.
You are confusing different people. That's not the current host on 107.7. Don't feel bad. Nobody else knows about that station either...
Sigh... still insisting "Michigans" was a word you saw "all over Buffalo" when you passed through town forty two years ago
Back to the beginning: the word "Michigans" was never used in Buffalo and nobody in The 716 calls a hot dog with sauce a "Michigan."
Their latest strategy is to use radio to promote digital and podcast. Too bad they don't spend some of those dollars promoting radio.
it's hard to listen to a SoCal host talk about how hot it is when you're getting ready to crank up the snow blower and clear the foot of snow that fell last night.
Pittman is a master showman, but arguably a miserable failure as the head of what's now called iHeart.
Above all, listeners don't care about any of this. They just know that the product isn't what it once was.
I found the weekend overnight shift in classic rock to be a good time to catch up on readingI had narrowed it down to the Newhouse School or small Ripon College in Wisconsin before taking a different path. Back then, of course, it was not called by the Newhouse name.
There does not have to be any negative perspective on using technology to make the product better.
Movies can be marvelously entertaining, and most are done in bits and pieces and assembled by the "technical staff" of editors and special effects people. In that industry, as technology has improved we get more and more possibilities for the final product. And then we get the Limu Emu, too.
It used to require several engineers on duty at all times at both the studio and the transmitter of stations like WOR. That was because the equipment required constant attention and lots of TLC. We've gone from that temperamental and ephemeral gear to devices that can be left unattended for months on end.
I don't see why technology can't relieve the airstaff of the need to sit around waiting for songs to play out. "Real time radio" is sort of like a '64 Mustang: a fond memory, but obsolete in so many ways.
Who are you talking about? When did that happen? Who listens to national talk show hosts for the weather? What Buffalo talk show host is based in SoCal? You're making this up.
WKSE ran Ryan Seacrest for quite a while in mid-days. It happened.
Yet his stations are among the most listened-to stations in the markets they're in, and now that he's reorganized the debt that the Mays family stuck him with, the company is better positioned to succeed. That's why the lenders re-hired him. He works for the lenders. Radio revenue never went to debt service. You're making that up too.
Radio revenue never went for debt service? Where did they get the money to pay the lenders? Renting out Pittman's plane? The Mays family was effectively out of the picture for several years before iHeart's bankruptcy. Yes, Clear Channel bought a lot of the top signals in many markets so they have listeners. What's happened since they bought those signals has clearly been erosion over time.
Of course not. Nothing is the way it once was. Buffalo was once a major market, and now it isn't. If the grab for cash bothers you, listen to public radio. Except when they fundraise.
The cash grab isn't just in radio. It's across all media. If you want to know why we're so polarized as a society it has everything to do with the expansion of syndicated bomb-throwers who will say anything if it gets people to listen - either because they agree or disagree. Journalism is on life support if it's not already dead. So much for the "public interest, convenience, and necessity."