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Radio Remote Broadcasts

It seems to me that, outside of sports, radio stations don't do remote broadcasts like they used to.
I remember the regular Saturday remotes with Jay Drennan on WSLR from the Chevy dealer and Howie Chizek on WNIR from Klaben Ford. Way back I recall Ronnie Barrett broadcast evenings from a nightclub, there were the WMMS Coffee Break Concerts, remotes from the Sportsman shows and the local stations that did remotes from sponsors, church affairs and county fairs. WIXY had that complete mobile studio trailer that was always around somewhere.
The pandemic put all that on hold but have they come back? I've seen the WONE and WQMX vans at the dealer, but do they still remote broadcast?
 
Very few. I recall Chizek's Klaben Ford remotes were done on a cell phone! Talk about low rent. Well, that's WNIR for you.
Otherwise, I believe that it has to do with the massive cutback in live personalities on local music-oriented radio over the past few years, and those few folks who are left are really just "announcers" and not personalities. It's not like the old days when those popular personalities appearing in person would be a draw.
 
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I don't know anyone who ever actively went to a radio remote simply because the remote was taking place. Except when I was a young radio nerd and made my mom take me to a Stop N Shop to meet Matt & BA from WKDD.
 
It seems to me that, outside of sports, radio stations don't do remote broadcasts like they used to.

That's an interesting comment, because they definitely don't do them, as you put it, "like they used to."

At one time, doing a station remote involved ordering a 5K phone line or setting up a Marti transmission system. Today, you can do a high quality remote from anywhere using a cell phone and either Zoom or some similar internet connection.

I can't speak specifically for Cleveland, but I know of a lot of radio stations that broadcast from bars and concert venues. Both iHeart and Audacy have events staffs that organize remotes from local concert venues where they hand out station swag and that sort of thing. The car dealer thing still happens, though usually on weekends.
 
I saw Bill Randle doing a remote broadcast from Athenian Village a long time ago, maybe late 90s/early 00s. I'm pretty sure that was the last I saw anyone do a remote broadcast.

Gary Sullivan who does At Home with Gary Sullivan on WTAM on Saturday morning has done his show from the the Home and Garden Show at the IX Center in recent years.
 
KLMI in Laramie does some remotes live live using a 4g hotspot as the main and the business wifi as a back up.... the automation they use (playout one ) has a live mic feature that you can go live with right in your browser.

Some remotes are recorded 5-10 minutes before they air and dropped into the system.

It depends on what the client wants and can do. Recording them means we can get a break or two ahead and the owner isnt beholden to being at the live remote stand at a very certain time

At bigger events or businesses, that can be a problem.

We have done several remotes that draw a big crowd.. usually contests are involved........ and we have been at already big events and do a remote there.

Its about a bunch of things.. the attitude and effort the station puts out, fort starters.

Our competitor in laramie would send one staff, one table...... we show up, 2 tables, speaker.. swag, usually smiling faces and etc etc
 
Expanding this outside of just the Cleveland radio topic where it was posted, I think there are many factors that play a part in whether stations do remote broadcasts - or as many as they used to. Smaller and medium market stations I would say don't do nearly as many. For one thing, auto dealerships, which were once staple clients for weekend remotes at least a few times per summer, have changed where and how they spend their ad dollars and at times the ad budget is no longer controlled by the local dealers themselves anymore. Many smaller businesses that would once do remotes to celebrate an event or a store opening simply don't have the ad $$ that they used to, as they have more and more competition from big box stores and internet commerce. As the cost of groceries goes up for all of us, so does the expenses for raw goods that restaurants, bars and eateries buy, and they need to strike a balance between still offering value vs. raising menu prices to offset their increased costs without losing too many customers in the process - and so they don't often have the funds to host remotes as they once did. Festivals, fairs, concerts and community events don't get as much live on-air exposure - for one thing stations don't have the engineers, board-ops and even live talent they once had to make themselves available to do remotes from those kinds of events (yes, I realize with modern tech and automation perhaps not all those people are required for the actual on-air part) and if they do, it costs $$ to do those live broadcasts and many stations, especially those in medium markets and smaller, are having a tough time financially.

A few things that made remotes work were, 1) A seeming endorsement of a business from a voice people knew and had formed a bond with by listening to them on the radio. 2) The ability to get to see those jocks or hosts in person and put a name to a face, maybe even get to chat with someone who was "local famous", and 3 ) Games and contests they could potentially win. For various reasons, most all these have gone away or have reduced importance or are now a bit of a throwback to a different time, though for many that "different time" may not seem that long ago.

I can share that, for us at least, the last handful of new restaurants we decided to try and at least a few entertainment events we've attended, we discovered because ads for them popped up in our Facebook or Instagram feeds or showed up in our e-mail inboxes after we'd attended past, similar events. We didn't hear them advertised on the radio...and in our case at least, the $$ those business spent advertising on social media worked.
 
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Festivals, fairs, concerts and community events don't get as much live on-air exposure - for one thing stations don't have the engineers, board-ops and even live talent they once had to make themselves available to do remotes from those kinds of events (yes, I realize with modern tech and automation perhaps not all those people are required for the actual on-air part) and if they do, it costs $$ to do those live broadcasts and many stations, especially those in medium markets and smaller, are having a tough time financially.

Even in medium markets, if you're a currents-based station that is a chart reporter, you do label-sponsored ticket give-aways, and you have a sponsored remote SUV. So hosting a station remote in conjunction with that concert is promotion 101. You don't need engineers or live talent. You need a promo director and some interns. Everything else is done by the automation back at the studio.
 
Even in medium markets, if you're a currents-based station that is a chart reporter, you do label-sponsored ticket give-aways, and you have a sponsored remote SUV. So hosting a station remote in conjunction with that concert is promotion 101. You don't need engineers or live talent. You need a promo director and some interns. Everything else is done by the automation back at the studio.
Last summer I attended a concert in a larger market. The local iHeart cluster had logo vehicles from a few of their station parked on the apron in front of the arena entrance, a station canopy set up with a table where they were handing out small stickers with the station logo on them (no t-shirts, hats or decent SWAG) and from what I could tell, it was basically a bunch of station lackeys - definitely not any of the known "talent" and definitely not a "remote broadcast" in the traditional sense, as the OP is referencing.
 
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Festivals, fairs, concerts and community events don't get as much live on-air exposure - for one thing stations don't have the engineers, board-ops and even live talent they once had to make themselves available to do remotes from those kinds of events (yes, I realize with modern tech and automation perhaps not all those people are required for the actual on-air part) and if they do, it costs $$ to do those live broadcasts and many stations, especially those in medium markets and smaller, are having a tough time financially.
But those events -- even for not-for-profit events -- were sponsored.
"Coverage of the 47th annual Shelby Co. Fair on Oldies 98 is brought to you by Brockmeyer Ford-Lincoln on Franklin Street. A Brockmeyer deal is a better deal."

No sponsorship? No appearance.
 
It seems to me that, outside of sports, radio stations don't do remote broadcasts like they used to.
I remember the regular Saturday remotes with Jay Drennan on WSLR from the Chevy dealer and Howie Chizek on WNIR from Klaben Ford. Way back I recall Ronnie Barrett broadcast evenings from a nightclub, there were the WMMS Coffee Break Concerts, remotes from the Sportsman shows and the local stations that did remotes from sponsors, church affairs and county fairs. WIXY had that complete mobile studio trailer that was always around somewhere.
The pandemic put all that on hold but have they come back? I've seen the WONE and WQMX vans at the dealer, but do they still remote broadcast?
Many years ago, a local station would do a Saturday morning remote at a local Ford dealership, then go up the road 8 miles or so for another remote that afternoon. Ironically, neither dealership exists today.
 
I'm in a small market with mostly voice tracked jocks yet we do a good number of remotes and air talent shows up. We do high school sports and cover a good deal of community events. I just signed a big account with 8 remotes in 2024. One think we do is a $100 bill giveaway....register during the remote and if the last break we draw the winner. Our last remote turned out over 250 entries for the $100 bill. We're talking a county of 43,000. If you work it right, people listen, claim you as their favorite station and come out to remotes and respond to advertising.
 
Several of our local stations rarely use their remote vans --- about the only time you see them "on the road" is when they're being driven to the garage for routine maintenance......!!
It used to be fun (for me, anyway.....) to see a remote broadcast, with the "DJ" actually playing records from turntables tied to a remote console.....In our area, most stations used a Marti RPU rather than a phone line for a studio link. The phone lines were most often used for sporting events --- from a field or arena, where a dedicated line could be installed and "flagged".
 
I can remember radio stations doing remotes from Chippewa Lake Amusement Park early/mid 70s when I was in high school and worked there.. WHLO in particular [pretty sure there were other stations besides them] and they packed the place. Probably more to do with the bands they sponsored that played there. This was before FM had really started making in-roads. The "Real" Bob James was there [he gave me a ride home when one of my co-workers and ride home got pissed and ditched me.] They gave out those 'tenna topper styrofoam balls all the time! Lat one I was involved in was early 80s and not one listener showed up. Kids wandering buy and seeing the station sign and asking "What's AM?" Couldn't even give away the 45 RPM promo rejects!
If I remember right "Dancin'" Danny Wright [or one of the other DJs] from WGCL did remotes from Uncle Vics bar that he had. I always thought it was strange that they were doing remotes from a bar where most of their listeners were not even old enough to get into.
Lanigan did a personal appearance-no remote stuff since it was at night-at the Strongsville Haunted Forest, I was running around with him at the time, but that's a story best left untold. I know he did live remotes from Shooters [I believe] on Saint Patrick's Day.
 
Lat one I was involved in was early 80s and not one listener showed up. Kids wandering buy and seeing the station sign and asking "What's AM?" Couldn't even give away the 45 RPM promo rejects!
That's curious how, in the early 1980s, kids would be asking "What's AM?"
I can tell you that on the other issue of the 45 RPM promo rejects, that could have been a big miss/mistake not to take them. As a collector, I can tell you that there are interesting and, sometimes, valuable things that can be found in collections of that sort.
 
Another reason why remotes are rarer to come by -- Gil-Dor Furniture in Old Brooklyn is out of business!!!

Seems like every station in town did a remote from Gil-Dor.
 
I can remember radio stations doing remotes from Chippewa Lake Amusement Park early/mid 70s when I was in high school and worked there.. WHLO in particular [pretty sure there were other stations besides them] and they packed the place. Probably more to do with the bands they sponsored that played there. This was before FM had really started making in-roads. The "Real" Bob James was there [he gave me a ride home when one of my co-workers and ride home got pissed and ditched me.] They gave out those 'tenna topper styrofoam balls all the time! Lat one I was involved in was early 80s and not one listener showed up. Kids wandering buy and seeing the station sign and asking "What's AM?" Couldn't even give away the 45 RPM promo rejects!
If I remember right "Dancin'" Danny Wright [or one of the other DJs] from WGCL did remotes from Uncle Vics bar that he had. I always thought it was strange that they were doing remotes from a bar where most of their listeners were not even old enough to get into.
Lanigan did a personal appearance-no remote stuff since it was at night-at the Strongsville Haunted Forest, I was running around with him at the time, but that's a story best left untold. I know he did live remotes from Shooters [I believe] on Saint Patrick's Day.
 
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