M
mjcarter1981
Guest
AV, man you're seriously messed up. But then again, aren't we all that are in this biz?
Double J said:;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
Too funny!!
The thing that gets me right now is all the "leagalese" at the beginning or ending of a commercial. They say it so damn fast that who in the world can actually UNDERSTAND it let alone read it during the recording of the said commercial. They make that fast talking guy from the 80s sound like Slow Poke Rodrques.
BenTehelenbach said:...listeners have sharper BS detectors than they did a generation ago.
allenv said:Most say more music... better variety c'mon why try to give the listener an illusion....just damn do what you say...plain and simple...I had a great conversation with my friend Bill Cozart yesterday.He is no longer in the business but still loves it and has great ideas.We were talking about how so many stations feed the listener the same old stuff and how nice it would be if someone would step outside the box and shock the world with something different.I know alot of Gm's.OM's etc....read this board..Why don't you join us and share ideas and tell us why the way things are...It might be fun...
Allen
surfdude said:Playing "Variety" means playing more songs listeners like,
and fewer songs they don't. That's why tighter playlists ALWAYS win!!
BenTehelenbach said:Sorry to have steered the discussion astray. The point I wanted to make is, none of us like cliches in commercials, yet none of us seem to be aware of the cliches we use to promote our own product, whether or not they're unfulfilled promises.
Double J said:We tend to not look at our own positioning statements and how lame and hollow they too are. The listener isn't as stupid as the suits think they are. If they listen long enough they will notice how hollow those very positioning statements are.