This has been mentioned before--DePetro's accent, for example...You know how in radio you're not really supposed to have a regional accent (especially on a national show) yet some do. There's Michael Savage ("Borston, you're next on the Savage Nation") from the Bronx, for one.
I was listening to WCOD while on Cape Cod and heard their local DJ (hey, at least it was local) talk about the WCOD "radah" forecast, and "Oy-stah Hahbahs" or
something. Meanwhile some of the ads for local businesses used a more non-
New England approach: (a restaurant in) mentioned the "r". HARR_wich,
not HAH-wich.
Sean Hannity has said he curbed his Noo Yawk accent for national radio but a few times I heard him slip back into it.
What kind of accent does Howie Carr have? In his growing up days (Portland ME,
Somerville, Deerfield) he somehow picked up pronunciation that turns "Syracuse"
into "SERRA-kyoose", Wisconsin into "WESS-consin", Illinois into "ELLEN-oy",
and collapsed into "Clapsed". (And what's with Peter Blute and some guy from
WEEI doing Purina ads and they say "Purr-e-na"? It's "PYOOR-ee-na")
Anyway...are people encouraged to try and tone down their wickid pissa
New England accents? DJs? Talk hosts? In some ways I get a kick out of the
N.E. accents, having one myself, but I guess it's more professional to
be "neutral". <P ID="signature">______________
News and views about Boston and New England Radio:
http://www.livejournal.com/community/boston_radio</P>
I was listening to WCOD while on Cape Cod and heard their local DJ (hey, at least it was local) talk about the WCOD "radah" forecast, and "Oy-stah Hahbahs" or
something. Meanwhile some of the ads for local businesses used a more non-
New England approach: (a restaurant in) mentioned the "r". HARR_wich,
not HAH-wich.
Sean Hannity has said he curbed his Noo Yawk accent for national radio but a few times I heard him slip back into it.
What kind of accent does Howie Carr have? In his growing up days (Portland ME,
Somerville, Deerfield) he somehow picked up pronunciation that turns "Syracuse"
into "SERRA-kyoose", Wisconsin into "WESS-consin", Illinois into "ELLEN-oy",
and collapsed into "Clapsed". (And what's with Peter Blute and some guy from
WEEI doing Purina ads and they say "Purr-e-na"? It's "PYOOR-ee-na")
Anyway...are people encouraged to try and tone down their wickid pissa
New England accents? DJs? Talk hosts? In some ways I get a kick out of the
N.E. accents, having one myself, but I guess it's more professional to
be "neutral". <P ID="signature">______________
News and views about Boston and New England Radio:
http://www.livejournal.com/community/boston_radio</P>