12 In a Row said:Ouch! Try selling that formula to potential advertisers.![]()
You know, potential advertisers just might love it.
Look, I'm not knocking radio's formats or current playlists. But we all know that the industry is due for a major shift of some type. Radio has to change to survive.
And you can't tell me that you like what the record labels are attempting to do to the last friend they have, namely radio. In a desperate search for money, the labels are trying to stab their friend in the back and steal his wallet. You know the old adage, "With friends like that..."
I say that it is time to take these entities out of the equation; the record labels, the RIAA even the music publishers. They have done nothing for radio beyond sucking on its teats. And this is why I like the Disney model so much. They have it all: recording artists, radio stations, a movie and television production arm (which does nothing but support its artists) concert promotions and much more. They are self-contained and dictate the terms.
I realize this is not practical for every station or station group but radio needs to get out of its comfort zone of spinning the same platters and selling on-air spots. It needs to beat these so-called "friends" at their own game and expand in new directions.
Radio needs to start dictating the terms, not passively accepting them.
C5