Rodney Ho is reporting on Q99-7's plans for middays and afternoon drive following the departures of Rachel Ryan and Adam Bomb.
Yvonne Monet, who worked at 99X years ago, will host middays. This surprised me until I thought about how CHR's demos have become older, something I see when buying radio. PD Louie Diaz said he wants a lot of content in middays and gives various types of mix shows as examples.
Afternoons will be handled by current evening jock Jade Jones, who will be joined by Bert Show cast member Moe Mitchell. (Mitchell will still be on the morning show.)
Diaz told Rodney that the moves are being made to counter music-intensive streaming services like Pandora and Spotify. I wonder if Corporate PD Brian Phillips had a hand in the changes because they smack of his creativity.
I applaud their trying this approach. We radio junkies often say what made radio successful was live local personalities to whom the listener could relate, and that element is now missing from music radio except for mornings. I hope Cumulus tested the concept of 2-person shows with a lot of non-music content. The ratings should provide an idea of whether adding live personalities and features is really what listeners want, or whether they prefer mainly music except for AM drive. The iHearts, Cumulus's and Entercoms of the world program like listeners want music and little else.
I have liked Mr. Diaz's formatics and can tell from listening that he knows what he's doing. But I can't listen to Q99-7 for more than 10-15 minutes because the processing grates on me.
Yvonne Monet, who worked at 99X years ago, will host middays. This surprised me until I thought about how CHR's demos have become older, something I see when buying radio. PD Louie Diaz said he wants a lot of content in middays and gives various types of mix shows as examples.
Afternoons will be handled by current evening jock Jade Jones, who will be joined by Bert Show cast member Moe Mitchell. (Mitchell will still be on the morning show.)
Diaz told Rodney that the moves are being made to counter music-intensive streaming services like Pandora and Spotify. I wonder if Corporate PD Brian Phillips had a hand in the changes because they smack of his creativity.
I applaud their trying this approach. We radio junkies often say what made radio successful was live local personalities to whom the listener could relate, and that element is now missing from music radio except for mornings. I hope Cumulus tested the concept of 2-person shows with a lot of non-music content. The ratings should provide an idea of whether adding live personalities and features is really what listeners want, or whether they prefer mainly music except for AM drive. The iHearts, Cumulus's and Entercoms of the world program like listeners want music and little else.
I have liked Mr. Diaz's formatics and can tell from listening that he knows what he's doing. But I can't listen to Q99-7 for more than 10-15 minutes because the processing grates on me.