radiogooroo said:
aunti-terrestrial said:
My hat's off to you, Steve, for understanding that post.
Again, I'm not Steve. Never been a Steve, never will be a Steve. I've had some friends named Steve, but I've never even met the Steve you all seem to think I am.
Okay, sorry. *wink*
radiobot said:
aunti-terrestrial said:
My hat's off to you, Steve, for understanding that post.
I'll clear it up for you. We are in a time where "seasoned" individuals are losing their jobs to National Celebrities who "thought it would be nice to host a radio show." Not to disrespect the hard work of some people but would you rather have, say, Al Shapiro, on your side or James Spader, as Alan Shore, simply because he is an excellent lawyer on television?
If you were to chose Mr. Spader then you represent the current train of thought in "corporate-radio."
I pray we never see the day when the public gets fed up with people who don't live in their respective communities. By that I mean, syndicated radio shows.
If this is going to be the norm and the audiences embrace it, then students and individuals who wish to commit to a career as a true On Air Personality/DJ or whatever are fighting a losing battle.
And in other news, fire is hot. I think what you're actually lamenting is not degrees or the lack thereof, but the trading of the Class C operator's license for the SAG card. It's been happening for eons.
If you'll look around, you'll notice that actors are now doing all of the television ads, cartoon characters, CD roms, and audio books. I would have loved to have spent my career narrating nature shows and documentaries, but Morgan Freakin' Freeman has a "take every job that comes along" work ethic, all jobs earning at least SAG scale. That means there's less money to pay your rank and file voiceover artist/class C radio operator who might do a very good voiceover, but hasn't got the name brand recognition that you get instantly when you hear a Morgan Freeman.
As for the radio side,
a few years ago, the FCC, at the insistence of lobbyists, threw out the requirement that every individual who touched the board was to be certified at least as far as knowing what to do if the tower crashed (hit one and raise, put the fire out if possible, speed dial the engineer). You had to be certified to launch the emergency broadcast signals and local emergency warnings. The deregulation of radio licensing meant that any warm body off the street could babysit a board, even if you had to program their songs in for them. And so began the rise of celebrity radio shows. Even better...two competing satellite companies with oodles and oodles of airtime to fill. Anybody with a Playskool (TM) laptop can access YouTube and become a viral star. Hollywood would have been blind not to notice, and they're a lot of things out there, but they're really good at creating a money and fad stream out of almost anything. Little Steven, Iggy Pop, that guy from Twisted Sister...it's easy to find a guy who used to be in a hot band willing to share his record collection for a couple of hours and send it down the wire to all the other stations in the chain. Voila, happy budget trimming and job eliminations.
There have been glitches along the way. For instance, in the video and computer game industry, SAG actors expected mailbox money for their work. They were surprised to find that most videogame companies don't expect to pay regular residuals for a one-time voice work session, no matter how famous you are (radio folks are used to selling a spot, getting paid, and moving on to the next job). SAG decided to sue and set the standard for what the videogame industry will have to pay, and I fully expect that will be another nail in the coffin of available freelance work for the rest of us. I don't know whether or not that's still in litigation, so I'll have to look it up when I get a moment.
Still, unless it becomes unprofitable for actors and famous drummers to put together a couple of hours on disc and sell them to a radio station parent company, I don't see them backing off anytime soon. After all, that moneystream kept us and our families afloat for years, didn't it? I don't see it getting any better unless localism requirements are revisited. By then, I'm willing to bet there'll be SAG requirements on issues we never even realized we were in danger of losing.
Just my opinion, anyway. It actually is an interesting discussion, even though it feels like old ground.