A couple of weeks ago I reminisced about the good old days of Payola and the post, while pointed if not somewhat incendiary, drew chuckled responses.
Consider this. Big oil and Detroit spend tens of millions greasing legislators so that you can drive that Acura, Lexus or Chrysler to work. Most every special interest group has a lobbyist paid, often through tax sheltered expense arrangements, to lobby there agenda. Be it Donald Trump or "Survivor" or "American Idol", the entertainment industry shills out "pay for play" as part of doing business.
And the whole radio/records/artists/A&R world shutters whenever it's accused of influence amongst radio owners and programmers.
If you were controlling a big record label wouldn't you be intrigued about the possibility of buying 100, 200 or 1000 sticks across the American radio landscape? Didn't happen did it! In fact noone ever suggested it and companies like Clear Channel gobbled it all up while others, like ABC, are now considering getting out of the arena and selling off there TV/Radio outlets. ABC realizes that, with few exceptions (like there talk radio stations in S.F.) they have no control over the content of there programming on radio. They'd risk congressional hearings if they tried and lets not even mention the boondoggle associated with profanity, file sharing and the birds. They can't maximize there properties and Infinity struggles with this too. You simply DON'T GIVE UP STERN without a fight unless something is seriously whacked. Even CC, with it's GOP friends in D.C. and Texas, is getting fined and bailing. If it smells then kick the radio division...
Payola meant sweat and pounding the pavement. It meant artists, themes, dreams and..well schtick too. And with radio you had 10-50 different niches to exploit in any given market. The stations with the best "ear" (along with marketing, gumption and balls) would end up winning. This summer everyone in the music biz is keen on seeing has-been, paid off stars doing the two-step on TV and whether "Idol" is played out or not..
I'll repeat my sentiments. Radio sounded better when record reps and music people paid off programmers. It's how The Beatles, Elvis, Supremes, Wonder, Beach Boys, Springsteen, U-2, Marvin, Aretha etc. got there start. I got disillusioned somewhat when deserving artists didn't get some play back in the late 80's. Remember Tipper Gore! It's way worse since..so flame away.
Consider this. Big oil and Detroit spend tens of millions greasing legislators so that you can drive that Acura, Lexus or Chrysler to work. Most every special interest group has a lobbyist paid, often through tax sheltered expense arrangements, to lobby there agenda. Be it Donald Trump or "Survivor" or "American Idol", the entertainment industry shills out "pay for play" as part of doing business.
And the whole radio/records/artists/A&R world shutters whenever it's accused of influence amongst radio owners and programmers.
If you were controlling a big record label wouldn't you be intrigued about the possibility of buying 100, 200 or 1000 sticks across the American radio landscape? Didn't happen did it! In fact noone ever suggested it and companies like Clear Channel gobbled it all up while others, like ABC, are now considering getting out of the arena and selling off there TV/Radio outlets. ABC realizes that, with few exceptions (like there talk radio stations in S.F.) they have no control over the content of there programming on radio. They'd risk congressional hearings if they tried and lets not even mention the boondoggle associated with profanity, file sharing and the birds. They can't maximize there properties and Infinity struggles with this too. You simply DON'T GIVE UP STERN without a fight unless something is seriously whacked. Even CC, with it's GOP friends in D.C. and Texas, is getting fined and bailing. If it smells then kick the radio division...
Payola meant sweat and pounding the pavement. It meant artists, themes, dreams and..well schtick too. And with radio you had 10-50 different niches to exploit in any given market. The stations with the best "ear" (along with marketing, gumption and balls) would end up winning. This summer everyone in the music biz is keen on seeing has-been, paid off stars doing the two-step on TV and whether "Idol" is played out or not..
I'll repeat my sentiments. Radio sounded better when record reps and music people paid off programmers. It's how The Beatles, Elvis, Supremes, Wonder, Beach Boys, Springsteen, U-2, Marvin, Aretha etc. got there start. I got disillusioned somewhat when deserving artists didn't get some play back in the late 80's. Remember Tipper Gore! It's way worse since..so flame away.