Why would someone today wait for a DJ to play what they like when they can go to Spotify to hear it right this instant? All of the "bring back the old days" talk around here doesn't acknowledge that it is in fact, not the 1960s,70s, 80s or 90s.
borderblaster said:Why would someone today wait for a DJ to play what they like when they can go to Spotify to hear it right this instant? All of the "bring back the old days" talk around here doesn't acknowledge that it is in fact, not the 1960s,70s, 80s or 90s.
borderblaster said:Then there's the assumption that today's young listeners would actually care about anything a DJ has to say, let alone want to go visit them at remotes.
landtuna said:If you in the biz continue to say no then you have sealed your own fate because you are failing now and will continue to fail unless dramatic changes are made.
landtuna said:Teen radio was popular years ago because it was informative, exciting and entertaining.
Lotus503 said:BUT, the current path that the radio industry is following is not improving the industry and is not giving listeners the information, excitement and entertainment (thank you, Landtuna) that it did in the past. It's unfortunate to say, but it's an industry in decline.
TheBigA said:landtuna said:If you in the biz continue to say no then you have sealed your own fate because you are failing now and will continue to fail unless dramatic changes are made.
I'm not saying "no." Young people have said "no." Lots of stations still have DJs and operate as you'd suggest, and they aren't attracting young people in substantial numbers. You don't attract today's youth with yesterday's solutions. Just as 1930s radio drama didn't attract fans of The Beatles and Rolling Stones. What we in radio are doing, and it's working, is providing a multi-platform presentation that uses all media. And it's working just fine. The ratings prove that young people today use radio in the same numbers as they did 40 years ago. But they are ALSO using other media. There is nothing radio can do that will cause people to throw away their cell phones. That's a fact, and we live with it.
landtuna said:Teen radio was popular years ago because it was informative, exciting and entertaining.
borderblaster said:I knew very few, if any, teens in my high school who had a TV in their room. They had to watch the family TV and fight for the show they wanted.
borderblaster said:I don't quite get the comment about TV "hosts" not making "emotional connections", what hosts are you talking about? The local news guys? Dick Clark? Johnny Carson?
borderblaster said:Nonetheless, the standard teen bedroom now has a laptop, smartphone, TV, DVD player and game system. In the 70s phone time was limited because there was one landline phone which had to be shared (where I grew up we were on party lines; if a family member didn't kick you off the neighbors would). That world doesn't exist now.
borderblaster said:Even in those days..and here's the deep dark secret...everyone wasn't in love with the DJs. There were countless listeners to radio stations, even the CKLWs and WLSs, who could not tell you what DJ was on when, or what DJ they were listening to "right now". They were more concerned with the big game and trying to get laid.
landtuna said:Young people are not listening to music radio in large numbers for the same reason no one else is....the presentation sucks.
landtuna said:There was an alternative years ago. It was called television and it sucked an enormous number of teens off evening radio.
landtuna said:Young people are not listening to music radio in large numbers for the same reason no one else is....the presentation sucks.
TheBigA said:Show me proof. Remember, I do this for a living. I see the numbers. They don't confirm what you're saying.
TheBigA said:If young people wanted to hear their music, the only place was on the radio. That's not the case any more.
landtuna said:I'm not in the biz and am going by comments published on this board and several radio sites.
borderblaster said:This board and others like it are filled with former DJs who want 1975 back. Though there are pros on this board, we don't have a representative sample of radio listeners or potential listeners, certailnly not to know that DJs talking up intros and hittin' the post is radio's answer.
landtuna said:I think some of you are still missing the point which is: involvemet!
TheBigA said:landtuna said:I think some of you are still missing the point which is: involvemet!
Nope...as I said in my previous post, our programming features multi-media approaches which are specifically built around involvement that far exceeds anything imagined 40 years ago. Our talent have proven credibility with the music they present, and they all interact with their listeners in very direct ways.
landtuna said:You do raise a question.....just what is meant by "credibility with the music"? DJ's are notorious for lacking the talent of a professional musician. They are akin to art brokers dealing in someone else's talent. That is not a slam, just an observation. So, in that context, how are DJ's or PD's "credible"?
landtuna said:The OP asked for suggestions.
TheBigA said:landtuna said:You do raise a question.....just what is meant by "credibility with the music"? DJ's are notorious for lacking the talent of a professional musician. They are akin to art brokers dealing in someone else's talent. That is not a slam, just an observation. So, in that context, how are DJ's or PD's "credible"?
Living the lifestyle. Knowing the artists. Speaking from personal direct knowledge, not liner notes.