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nightfly61
Guest
Maybe that explains why they didn't bother to add the "Hit Predictor" to the site when they re-vamped it a while back.
What are we supposed to do now??? :'(
What are we supposed to do now??? :'(
My earliest memory of R&R was an issue with a grinning Wolfman Jack in a great big front page photo
nightfly61 said:What are we supposed to do now??? :'(
To Numjock:NamJock said:nightfly61 said:What are we supposed to do now??? :'(
How's bout using your ears?
To both comments. Seriously, there's lots of sources. Start searching.
Jeesh dude, you don't have to be a snobby old know it all about it! I'm familiar with plenty of sites but none as handy as R&R were...and if you think I'd put a penny into corporate radio's pocket you must be numb. With a disposition like that I think it's time someone should retire or get out of "the biz".NamJock said:Well, there's a story behind my preudonym, but It's NamJock (with an "a" - but that's ok, at my age they're pretty numb sometimes). And Handy-Dandy. Look harder.
My advice to you after being in the biz for 40 years is - pay for it, if you have to have it! You think we do this stuff and support our families by giving out free info and advice? If you needed new headsets, would you try to find them free on the internet? Or would you invest in furthering your career.
Maybe it was too much free information that did in R&R. And there's a few other friends of mine in the biz who seem to be giving it away until the doors close.
Use your brain. There are plenty of sources for you to find what others are thinking about current music - Yahoo? And have some trust in your own ears - or get out of the business if you must be led around on a leash. Do you think we had these online charts in the '60s and early '70s? We had ears, a phone, friends and Billboard.
Yet we managed to field some pretty righteous stations. Slack away bud, slack away.
Jay F said:I would disagree with one point you made Questor. I would say radio is LESS competitive than it used to be. There were a lot more heated radio wars pre-consolidation.
TheBigA said:Jay F said:I would disagree with one point you made Questor. I would say radio is LESS competitive than it used to be. There were a lot more heated radio wars pre-consolidation.
It depends on what you mean by competition. If you compare the ratings in a city now vs. 20 years ago, today a tenth of a point separates the stations in the Top 10. In the old days, you have a few stations in double-digits, and a lot of stations in the basement. In the old days, you'd have several stations in the same format. Today, it's harder to do that and win. Instead you have the talk station competing against the country station for #1. The competition is still very tough, especially among big players, plus you're competing against lots of other media. So it's a different form of competition, and still very tough. I don't think radio, by itself, can compete in the way it used to, before cable, the internet, and everything else. United, radio will stand. Divided, it will fall.
Please :These guys are the real pros and heroes of this industry