First I have to say.. I can't take a couple hours off to run an errand and someone else emails me saying they are quitting the board! lol.. ah well.. can't please everyone. One from each side the argument so the score is still even! : )
Always in the spirit of discussion, I agree.
I can appreciate that the pros get tired of explaining the same information to the same people. It can get that way from my position managing the board and trying to explain to people to get along, over and over! So I am with you on that.. Should we create a "professionals only" section?
I think your last paragraph is the one that the enthusiasts should reread. While I do appreciate the enthusiasts, and I'm sure you all do too because they are part of the listeners radio caters to.. I also concede that the constant verbal beating towards programmers will not change anything, not without a collective, vocal mass.
I think it can be hard for some to accept that there is little "heart" or "adventure" in the industry anymore for them, as there seemed to be in the past, and maybe that was all a mirage.. but it's all business, ratings and profits, now. Does that make sense?
First and foremost, I appreciate your willingness to discuss.
The problem I have with a "professionals only" section is that it then excludes the enthusiasts (and there are several) who ask questions, pay attention to the answers and learn from the discussion. Disagreement is part of discussion, but there comes a point where it's like going to a site where someone explains how an internal combustion engine runs only to have some of the posters insist over and over again that cars can run just fine on unicorn tears if only someone would try it.
As for business versus heart: It's always been a business. Every format change of the past 60-plus years has been because someone wasn't making enough money or thought they could make more than they were. We've just developed means of discerning and then responding to the likes and behaviors of the audience advertisers want. The stations of the past revered by many posters today were often derided as cold, calculating, corporate money machines in their time.