...why does radio still suck?
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...dead-so-why-does-radio-remain-a-wasteland.ars
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...dead-so-why-does-radio-remain-a-wasteland.ars
softmachine said:...why does radio still suck?
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...dead-so-why-does-radio-remain-a-wasteland.ars
SoulCrusher said:In its wake, we have witnessed the birth of McRadio. It is my opinion that this act has contributed to the decline of terrestrial radio, and action must be taken to prevent the potential demise of terrestrial radio.
TheBigA said:I'm probably older than you, and I can tell you factually that "McRadio," as you call it, was not born in 1996. It's been around since at least the 60s. Call it what you will, copycat radio, cookie cutter radio, or anything else. It's latest incarnation began with the rise of Top 40 radio in the late 50s. Then the explosion of album rock on FM in the 70s.
I can tell you that the 96 Act had little or no effect on the programming of terrestrial radio. Had it not become law, we would have witnessed the same effect through LMAs, which were the rage in the late 80s.
Say what you will about Clear Channel. They own less than 10% of all radio. And all the major corporate players have been selling off stations, so overall corporate ownership is less than 20%. They just happen to be the most successful and most popular stations, which means they're targets for all the haters. But if they suck so much, why are they so popular? Certainly not because they're the only choice. Listeners have tons of alternatives.
My view is simple: It's hard to talk about music radio without first talking about music. The fact is that most of the music today sucks. It's sucked for a long time. And even though major label music is bad, it's even worse at the indies. How do I know? I listen. The FMC can't understand why more than 50% of the music was released before 1999. The answer is simple: Most of today's music sucks. Why doesn't the FMC direct its attacks at those who make the music instead of those who play it? Unfortunately, we have to listen to it. Have pity on us in radio. Please teach singers how to sing on key, and musicians how to play their instruments. I'm also shocked at the terrible technical quality in some music I receive. These studios don't know how to mic instruments properly.
One has to wonder when a 22 year old college student from Oklahoma can go from waiting tables to winning a TV talent show to selling 10 million records in just 3 years. She won a Grammy for Best New Artist in 2006, and just a few weeks ago was named the ACM's Entertainer of the Year. Carrie Underwood wasn't even a music major in college. Know what her major was? Broadcasting! What does that say about all the music schools in this country? What does this say about all the talent scouts and A&R people looking for new recording artists. They need a TV show to find talent, and then they want to charge radio for playing their music. Fat lot of nerve if you ask me.
I can't understand how the FMC and AFTRA can be against payola, and in favor of the performance royalty. Especially after Jon Simson of SoundExchange has already said he'd use the royalty as a form of reverse payola to give discounts to encourage airplay of new music. That's illegal! He can't influence airplay with a royalty discount! Who is he kidding?
All these people will have nothing to complain about in a few years. The way music is going, its audiences are so splintered, and its costs are so high, no one in radio will play ANY music any more. Then what will the Future of Music do?
neo11 said:the same DJ holding down airshifts in hundreds of markets, etc. is definitely a far more recent phenomenon, especially at the scale it's reached today.
neo11 said:What percentage of *urban* *commercial* signals does CC own? I bet it's much higher than 10%. What about their dominance in certain formats.
neo11 said:You mention listeners have tons of alternatives, but is that really true? It's an overused example, but look at what happened in Minot, ND just a few years ago. 6 FM stations, all 6 owned by CC.
neo11 said:Oh, and if they are so successful, how do you explain how poorly these corporations are all doing now? Look at CC and Citadel for starters.
neo11 said:This is a purely subjective argument.
neo11 said:The issue goes deeper. Radio is becoming less relevant and audiences are not "held hostage" by the music that radio stations decide to play, good or bad. There's a whole universe of music--good, bad, new, old--that can easily be discovered today, and radio hasn't adapted so far.
TheBigA said:neo11 said:the same DJ holding down airshifts in hundreds of markets, etc. is definitely a far more recent phenomenon, especially at the scale it's reached today.
I worked at an automated station in a large market about 25 years ago. No live or local voices. All piped in from out of town. The company that provided the content had hundreds of affiliates. So no, it's nothing new.
neo11 said:What percentage of *urban* *commercial* signals does CC own? I bet it's much higher than 10%. What about their dominance in certain formats.[/quote.
That's not the point. The point is if they suck, their signal doesn't matter.
neo11 said:You mention listeners have tons of alternatives, but is that really true? It's an overused example, but look at what happened in Minot, ND just a few years ago. 6 FM stations, all 6 owned by CC.
My point is that radio is not the only media alternative available to the public today. Even Minot ND has four TV stations.
neo11 said:Oh, and if they are so successful, how do you explain how poorly these corporations are all doing now? Look at CC and Citadel for starters.
They're successful in the ratings. Ad-supported media in general is doing poorly. Even Bloomberg had to lay people off.
New York is a big city. Its radio stations, for the most part, have always been owned by big corporations. Starting with Westinghouse and AT&T in the 1920s. Sure you can bring up the Hoyt Brothers (WHBI), but some of the biggest companies in the world are headquartered in NYC. Cost of living is not the place for mom & pop, if you know what I mean.
neo11 said:This is a purely subjective argument.
neo11 said:The issue goes deeper. Radio is becoming less relevant and audiences are not "held hostage" by the music that radio stations decide to play, good or bad. There's a whole universe of music--good, bad, new, old--that can easily be discovered today, and radio hasn't adapted so far.
Which is why the future for music on the radio, as I said, is not very good. Everyone wants their "own private radio station," playing their favorites, and no commercials. Why play music if all it does is alienate your audience?
neo11 said:But it still wasn't the norm anywhere close to the level that it is today.
neo11 said:And if you don't think there is a correlation between the quality of a station's signal and its likelihood of success, I have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.
neo11 said:Why don't you show us the results of this survey? It does seem to me that the design is flawed from the outset.
neo11 said:Not always. We've seen CBS Radio's poor performing FM's in NYC as a prime example.
neo11 said:Perhaps, but do you deny the role the Telecommunications Act had in helping the CC's of the world acquire 3-5 stations each in cities like New York? That would not have been possible prior to 1996.
neo11 said:But wait, I thought you said the CC and CBS Radio stations out there didn't suck, which is why millions listen to them. Then you say that the music today sucks. Now you say that people want to hear their own private stations, commercial-free. Which is it?
TheBigA said:neo11 said:But it still wasn't the norm anywhere close to the level that it is today.
Sure it was. And far cruder than it is today. Technology has made it better, but not more widespread. There's more hand-wringing about it now, but that doesn't mean it's more widespread. A lot of upset people. Someone moved their cheese. But half of the radio stations on the air in the 70s were automated. Most of the NPR stations around the country have been running various network shows for 30 years. It hasn't hurt them.
neo11 said:And if you don't think there is a correlation between the quality of a station's signal and its likelihood of success, I have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.
When WYNY was on 103.5, it got a 1.6 share, and it's PD complained the signal sucked. When they sold to Broadcast Partners and flipped the format to WKTU, it went to #1. Same signal. Different format.
neo11 said:Why don't you show us the results of this survey? It does seem to me that the design is flawed from the outset.
So do your own survey, and see if you come up with different results. Let me know.
neo11 said:Not always. We've seen CBS Radio's poor performing FM's in NYC as a prime example.
They don't care. FM is gravy to them. It's not like there are loads of formats available that would do substantially better, are there? Sure, someone could take the FMC's advice and do indie radio. But the college stations already have that area covered. No point at trying to take them on.
neo11 said:Perhaps, but do you deny the role the Telecommunications Act had in helping the CC's of the world acquire 3-5 stations each in cities like New York? That would not have been possible prior to 1996.
In the 1960s, there were just a couple thousand radio stations in the entire company. In 1996, that number had quintupled. Lots of companies, like NBC, Westinghouse, and GE, were getting out of radio. In the 60s, a station like WABC could get a 20 share. By the 90s, no one could get more than an 8. AM was in shambles. Something had to be done. We're at a similar point now, but I don't think anyone wants to buy stations any more.
neo11 said:But wait, I thought you said the CC and CBS Radio stations out there didn't suck, which is why millions listen to them. Then you say that the music today sucks. Now you say that people want to hear their own private stations, commercial-free. Which is it?
All of the above, depending on who you ask. We're in a transitional phase now.
neo11 said:We're looking at two slightly different things here, first of all: syndicated programming versus voicetracking or complete automation.
neo11 said:How many of those stations which originally ran automation later switched to live programming? Why did they switch? Could it be because having live personalities on the air drew more listeners and offset the cost of hiring said personalities?
neo11 said:How many of the nation's *premiere* stations were fully automated? How many of those automated stations still employed local sales staff, perhaps even a news team, or aired at least some live programming? How many of those were FM stations in an era where FM had yet to take off? These are all significant questions that you leave unanswered.
neo11 said:This is an absolutely ridiculous example to use.
neo11 said:Again: why not show us the results of your own survey first, then we'll talk.
neo11 said:The fact that they may be clueless in other ways, such as poor format execution, does not mean that they do not care. Those are two very different things.
neo11 said:If you think CBS is holding off because they feel that college radio has got that niche covered, you're sadly delusional.
neo11 said:You say something had to be done. Why do you feel that is?
neo11 said:And let's not forget that in 1996, the internet was still essentially in its infancy, and mp3s and streaming radio were still a thing of the future. No satellite radio either. 1996 may not seem like too long ago, but 1996 had many more similarities with the 80s than it did with even 2000 or 2001.
neo11 said:It can also be argued that AM was pretty much in shambles since the early-mid 80s. I'm not sure how you feel the Telecommunications Act somehow revived AM radio.
neo11 said:It seems to me that successful stations were still making lots of money in 1996 without the help of deregulation. Good programming is good programming, and one doesn't need a CC or CBS to achieve that. Your reasoning makes one wonder how radio survived before these guys came on the scene.
DavidEduardo said:softmachine said:...why does radio still suck?
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...dead-so-why-does-radio-remain-a-wasteland.ars
That is, even by the "play unknown songs by unknown aritsts" crowd's standards, an amazingly disingenuous article.
The part that says, "FMC doesn't chalk this up to continued payola. Instead, the data "reinforce the notion made earlier that major labels' longstanding relationships with radio, and their tacit promise to devote additional resources to a release (tour support, retail placement, ads, sponsorships) incentivizes radio to play their songs more frequently than those of indie labels.""
I have never paid any attention to the retail actdivities of any record company (tour support, retail placements, ads, etc.) as it is irrelevant to the programming of music on the radio. I've never been told "we have prime display space" at WalMart by a record promoter or via record company press releases. Nor do I know anyone who has.
Programmers add new songs based on how good the songs are for their formats.
A few things do matter... if there are too many fast songs, or slow songs, on the list already, that fast or slow song may have to wait a week or two so the total station sound does not get unbalanced. An artist with a history of many hits will have a better chance of immediate adds than an artist with a few hits or none. And, of course, if we are unsure of a song have been holding onto it, but we see some stations we respect add it, we may go on it too. But if we see the song stiffing elsewhere, we may not add it.
More important, new adds are pretty much made by gut feeling, experience and skill as a programmer. But within a few weeks, bigger stations have listener feedback from callout or web-based research and they know whether a song is a keeper or not.
And in most formats, new or current songs are either not part of the format or only a component in it, not the whole base of the format. So stations like that will be by nature conservative in adds because the listeners have proven to be conservative in acceptance of new music.
In the PPM ratings era, all one has to do is look at a station's "dial count" as each song is played and it's easy to realize that 1) all new music is pretty negative at first, and 2) bad songs are easy to spot, and they hurt ratings.
But, the bottom line is that most PDs are blind to the label. The artist is important, the recent history of the artist is important, the sound of the song is important. The size of the label isn't important; radio is in the ad sales business, not the music sales business.
And before you jump up and assert that it's our job to give all this music the attention it deserves, know that we're overwhelmed with multiple station responsibilities, airshifts, promotional appearances, meetings, airchecks, and the list goes on. There literally aren't enough hours in the day to screen every record that comes through the door
It is what it is and all the whining won't change a thing.
Dick Skinner said:Thanks, David, for stating what I've been too lazy to articulate in these pages.
There's another reason the process favors major label releases over independents: In marketing it's called profile.
Atlantic sends me three or four CD pros of each song they're working. I get numerous weekly calls, voicemails and email updates from national and local label reps. The artist swings by the station with lunch for the staff, plays a mini-concert in our conference room and, if warranted, makes an on-air appearance. I'm invited to see the band play at a local venue. Every one of these impressions impacts my awareness of the act and brings that record's profile to top-of-mind in my next music meeting. This is the nature of effective promotion and the costs are enormous.
Your typical indie label sends me a copy of the full CD in a mailer with a printed one-sheet directing me to a lead track or two. I might get a call from an under-informed "head of promotion" who knows little or nothing about my station, and rarely is there any follow-up. The result is little or no profile. By the way, I take or return all calls regardless of label. The point is that most independent labels are ill equipped to compete in the marketplace. They don't wield the budgets or experience to impact the programming community. They simply lack the resources to run with the big dogs.
And before you jump up and assert that it's our job to give all this music the attention it deserves, know that we're overwhelmed with multiple station responsibilities, airshifts, promotional appearances, meetings, airchecks, and the list goes on. There literally aren't enough hours in the day to screen every record that comes through the door And if your indie band is blowing up at iTunes, it's your job to make us aware of it. If there's something going on with a record, I want to know about it. I like breaking records; who doesn't?
Oh, and for the record, radio's problems today are more a function of mismanaged debt and a weakened economy than its failure to embrace every new record that every indie label can churn out. Look at which channels on satellite radio garner the highest ratings. It's not the boutique formats; it's the channels that present a mass appeal product.
So, go ahead and tell me how much I suck for participating in such an evil and corrupt system. It is what it is and all the whining won't change a thing.
Silkie said:You must be the manager or the owner.
TheBigA said:My view is simple: It's hard to talk about music radio without first talking about music. The fact is that most of the music today sucks. It's sucked for a long time. And even though major label music is bad, it's even worse at the indies. How do I know? I listen. The FMC can't understand why more than 50% of the music was released before 1999. The answer is simple: Most of today's music sucks. Why doesn't the FMC direct its attacks at those who make the music instead of those who play it? Unfortunately, we have to listen to it. Have pity on us in radio. Please teach singers how to sing on key, and musicians how to play their instruments. I'm also shocked at the terrible technical quality in some music I receive. These studios don't know how to mic instruments properly.
adma said:Though is this a matter of "commercial music radio", or "commercial radio music"? Maybe we're also talking about a shift in values that's a little more complicated than "sucking" versus "not sucking".
TheBigA said:adma said:Though is this a matter of "commercial music radio", or "commercial radio music"? Maybe we're also talking about a shift in values that's a little more complicated than "sucking" versus "not sucking".
I just see a rise in more music for fewer people, such as lots of artists who aim what they do for small groups of dedicated fans. Rather than the emphasis on creating mega acts who could play stadiums. I don't know many acts who've begun in the last 15 years who could headline stadiums (except for country stars). But take a dozen acts from the 80s, and they could all do it, from Bon Jovi to Springsteen to U2 to the Police to the Stones.
Part of me wonders if this is because the record labels (RCA, Columbia, and MCA) are no longer owned by American media giants, but rather foreign companies. Has the focus of these companies changed because of foreign ownership and the lack of a connection to American media? Outside of country, most artists that have been launched in the last 15-20 years don't do a lot of radio visits or interviews. They mainly do TV, internet, and print. I notice the labels have been firing radio promo staffs. And then they wonder why radio doesn't play their music. They don't seem to work radio as hard as they once did.
neo11 said:TheBigA said:neo11 said:But it still wasn't the norm anywhere close to the level that it is today.
Sure it was. And far cruder than it is today. Technology has made it better, but not more widespread. There's more hand-wringing about it now, but that doesn't mean it's more widespread. A lot of upset people. Someone moved their cheese. But half of the radio stations on the air in the 70s were automated. Most of the NPR stations around the country have been running various network shows for 30 years. It hasn't hurt them.
We're looking at two slightly different things here, first of all: syndicated programming versus voicetracking or complete automation. Most syndicated programming falls in the realm of talk: NPR programs, or the Rush Limbaughs and Sean Hannitys of the world. If the discussion is about national/international issues, it makes sense to have programs and personalities with a national reach. There's also nothing about talk programming that sounds "automated." And until recently, such programming hadn't come at the expense of local news/talk personalities. However, in the past few years, we've seen stations do away with local news departments, fire local personalities and go the easy way out with more and more syndicated fare. Look at WABC as a prime example.
Now, regarding automation: of course I am aware that it has been around for a while. However, you conveniently reach back to the 70s. How many of those stations which originally ran automation later switched to live programming? Why did they switch? Could it be because having live personalities on the air drew more listeners and offset the cost of hiring said personalities? How many of those automated formats were on the same pea-shooter signals that are most likely to be automated today as well? How many of the nation's *premiere* stations were fully automated? How many of those automated stations still employed local sales staff, perhaps even a news team, or aired at least some live programming? How many of those were FM stations in an era where FM had yet to take off? These are all significant questions that you leave unanswered.
neo11 said:And if you don't think there is a correlation between the quality of a station's signal and its likelihood of success, I have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.
When WYNY was on 103.5, it got a 1.6 share, and it's PD complained the signal sucked. When they sold to Broadcast Partners and flipped the format to WKTU, it went to #1. Same signal. Different format.
This is an absolutely ridiculous example to use. Just because some moronic PD complained about the signal to cover for his own station's programming shortcomings, we're going to use this as an example about "bad" versus "good" signals? 103.5's signal, though one of the few that was on the WTC instead of Empire, was essentially equal to the other full-power FM's in NYC. Perhaps that 1.6 had to do with the format and not the signal, but the PD didn't want to own up to the station's failure?
neo11 said:Why don't you show us the results of this survey? It does seem to me that the design is flawed from the outset.
So do your own survey, and see if you come up with different results. Let me know.
Again: why not show us the results of your own survey first, then we'll talk.
neo11 said:Not always. We've seen CBS Radio's poor performing FM's in NYC as a prime example.
They don't care. FM is gravy to them. It's not like there are loads of formats available that would do substantially better, are there? Sure, someone could take the FMC's advice and do indie radio. But the college stations already have that area covered. No point at trying to take them on.
You can absolutely bet that they *do* care. If they didn't care, they wouldn't have pulled the plug on CBS-FM in 2005 (like it or not, billing was going down and the average age of listeners was going up), they wouldn't have pulled the plug on an underperforming Mix 102.7, and they wouldn't have pulled a plug on grossly underperforming formats in Free FM and, later, K-Rock. They do care. The fact that they may be clueless in other ways, such as poor format execution, does not mean that they do not care. Those are two very different things.
And I have to laugh at your assertion about college stations, and not because I disrespect college radio (far from it). But let's look at NYC: which college stations play indie rock? Perhaps WNYU a few hours a day. There's also WNYE, which is not a college station but which rebroadcasts KEXP a few hours a day. Of course, there's more stations in the suburbs, depending on where you live. But with college radio, you often go to the other extreme: very esoteric music with limited mass appeal (not a judgment on whether the music is "good" or not, just a fact). Limited appeal, coupled with limited signals in most cases, and limited promotions, which means that far fewer people can hear the stations and even fewer people know they exist or even bother to look in the 88-92 MHz section of the dial. Not just that, but CBS already operates other stations, such as KROQ in Los Angeles, that fit what many posters here and on other message boards feel would be a good fit in NYC. If you think CBS is holding off because they feel that college radio has got that niche covered, you're sadly delusional.
neo11 said:Perhaps, but do you deny the role the Telecommunications Act had in helping the CC's of the world acquire 3-5 stations each in cities like New York? That would not have been possible prior to 1996.
In the 1960s, there were just a couple thousand radio stations in the entire company. In 1996, that number had quintupled. Lots of companies, like NBC, Westinghouse, and GE, were getting out of radio. In the 60s, a station like WABC could get a 20 share. By the 90s, no one could get more than an 8. AM was in shambles. Something had to be done. We're at a similar point now, but I don't think anyone wants to buy stations any more.
You say something had to be done. Why do you feel that is? Because the likes of NBC and Westinghouse were getting out of radio? It seems to be they had no problems finding buyers for their stations, buyers who were not named Clear Channel and CBS and Emmis and Citadel. KTU, which you referenced above, wasn't launched by Clear Channel, but by a company named Evergreen. And it shot to the top in one ratings book. They didn't need the programming "geniuses" from San Antonio to achieve that, did they? Just like with Z100 and Malrite back in 1983. And even back in 1983, when a station like Z shot to the top, it was not coming anywhere close to a 20 share. If radio had changed, it changed long before 1996. And let's not forget that in 1996, the internet was still essentially in its infancy, and mp3s and streaming radio were still a thing of the future. No satellite radio either. 1996 may not seem like too long ago, but 1996 had many more similarities with the 80s than it did with even 2000 or 2001.
It can also be argued that AM was pretty much in shambles since the early-mid 80s. I'm not sure how you feel the Telecommunications Act somehow revived AM radio, since it's continued to go downhill since then, despite the "expert" programming touches of the likes of Clear Channel.
It seems to me that successful stations were still making lots of money in 1996 without the help of deregulation. Good programming is good programming, and one doesn't need a CC or CBS to achieve that. Your reasoning makes one wonder how radio survived before these guys came on the scene.
neo11 said:But wait, I thought you said the CC and CBS Radio stations out there didn't suck, which is why millions listen to them. Then you say that the music today sucks. Now you say that people want to hear their own private stations, commercial-free. Which is it?
All of the above, depending on who you ask. We're in a transitional phase now.
Nice non-answer. You should go into politics!
You will NEVER get a straight answer out of anyone that works in radio management. So forget about it! They are all double talking, gutless, weasels.
I will now go and duck under the table.