Eric Rhoads is the publisher of Radio Ink. I read it from time to time, and generally find it amusing in all the self-importance radio people still have for themselves.
Eric's latest blog brings up the ultimate in delusion. He writes about "saving radio" and brings up this very strange paragraph:
Now, what is wrong with that paragraph? Well, radio is not a person. Radio, terrestrial radio, is a form of technology that appears to be phasing out. It is stupid to equate the downturn of radio with a spouse that has cancer. In fact, it's insulting to folks with cancer to read such a thing.
If radio is in a permanent downturn (and so far it appears to be), then maybe it's time for radio people to stop pining for the good old days of buggy whips, oil lanterns, and blacksmiths, and embrace the new technology on the block.
Blogs like Eric's remind me of my great uncle Domingo who pined for the good old days, cussing out the "youngsters" who had changed the name of Bank of Italy to Bank of America decades earlier. He couldn't release his grasp on an event that had happened 40 years earlier. Many radio folks today can't release their grasp on radio that happened 40 years earlier, either. It's sad when you think about it.
The Eric Rhoads blog: http://ericrhoads.blogs.com/ink_tank/
I just want to shake these people and tell them to wake up and smell the new technology. Lie down in it and get it all over your fur like a dog on the lawn. Embrace the new, don't cuss it out.
Eric's latest blog brings up the ultimate in delusion. He writes about "saving radio" and brings up this very strange paragraph:
Human Decency
A decent human being would not abandon a spouse if he or she contracted cancer. Just as your care and attention are needed for a sick family member during a challenging time, your devotion to radio is needed now -- no matter how great your frustration level with your employer. You are not alone. If you got into radio because you love it, garner the devotion to fix it. Mounting pressure has detracted from radio's fun atmosphere, but solving our industrywide sales problem will relieve that pressure. You are valuable and you are needed now.
Now, what is wrong with that paragraph? Well, radio is not a person. Radio, terrestrial radio, is a form of technology that appears to be phasing out. It is stupid to equate the downturn of radio with a spouse that has cancer. In fact, it's insulting to folks with cancer to read such a thing.
If radio is in a permanent downturn (and so far it appears to be), then maybe it's time for radio people to stop pining for the good old days of buggy whips, oil lanterns, and blacksmiths, and embrace the new technology on the block.
Blogs like Eric's remind me of my great uncle Domingo who pined for the good old days, cussing out the "youngsters" who had changed the name of Bank of Italy to Bank of America decades earlier. He couldn't release his grasp on an event that had happened 40 years earlier. Many radio folks today can't release their grasp on radio that happened 40 years earlier, either. It's sad when you think about it.
The Eric Rhoads blog: http://ericrhoads.blogs.com/ink_tank/
I just want to shake these people and tell them to wake up and smell the new technology. Lie down in it and get it all over your fur like a dog on the lawn. Embrace the new, don't cuss it out.