MsMusicRadio said:
1) To Rush-----don't slam the door on your way out.
2) If stations like WFLA, WRVA, KDKA, etc. loose these conservative talk shows, maybe they can go back to actually reporting the news or even better, go back to the concept of local radio with a full-service format. Even if they are conservative, they might lose the nasty edge going down for decades.
Again, here is another person who wants the 1950's and 1960's to come back.
It won't happen.
Full Service radio succeeded back then because there were a lot fewer stations in markets back then, and one or two stations could take the "all things to all people" approach. You could play a little music...do news twice an hour...do sports at :15 till and succeed.
Today, the landscape has changed. A "Full Service" station, in most cases cannot do sports as well as a well programmed all sports station. News could be done, but most companies refuse to put the money or effort into news programming. Why? It takes about 8 -15 employees (full and parttime) to do it right. Go ahead...ask your local station whose billing is down 20% from last year if they can hire
15 people. If people want news, they'll go to a station that does news and does it well...in most cases, it's a news-talk station. And that's because music stations have abandoned any attempts to cover news. (There are good news-talkers, even if the stations air conservative talk, whether your politics allows you to believe it or not.) The news on Newstalk stations is done the way it is because these stations understand how people use radio today...not how they used it in 1962. People lives are so complex, they don't have time to sit and listen to radio. If they want news, they want it encapsulated...tell me what I need to know in 3-4 sentences.
Don't believe me...do the research. The company for which I work has done it. And the newstalk I work for is #1 in our market...in a home city and home county that is heavily Democratic politically. We air syndicated conservative talk. And we get double-digit shares consistently.
You see, some of you who are too hung up on politics don't get it. To us, the talk shows are like records on a music station. They are the "filler" between informational or commercial segments. That's all.
When there's breaking news, or emergency weather information...we break in. And no, if it's important enough to break in, we don't care what the dittoheads say. They can sit and complain all they want...and do. You wouldn't believe the number of "I'm going to listen to Rush on (WXXX) outside of town" calls we get. Doesn't matter. We're still #1. Our news department, reporters, anchors and producers watch the news 24/7. If something happens at 2 am...we're on it.
Oh yeah...did I mention we produce 4 plus hours of local public affairs programming every week? Some of those shows air as late at 9:30 in the morning on Sundays. That's called serving the public "interest, convenience and necessity". We air pro and con interviews on many of the issues of the day.
Music? Nobody will listen to it on AM. Unless you're over 50 and AM is all you listen to. Audience moves from AM to FM...not the other way around. It's a proven fact. And over 50 audiences don't make money.
You see, we focus on our local information as the key to our success. Talk shows are secondary.
Now, to Rush's comments today? Sure, if Clear Channel goes bust and goes to the government hat in hand, yeah...the President could offer bailout money in return for "fairness". If that happens, I would bet the result would be about the same as we could...I said "could" see from General Motors in about 5-7 years. Another broke company selling products few want to buy propped up by government money none of us can afford to spend. But, that's just my thinking.
Moreover, Rush, you see...doesn't have one thing. That's a union to protect his interests with the government, as GM and Chrysler's current employees and retirees have with the UAW. AFTRA (the American Federation of TV and Radio Artists), is only in the largest of markets anymore. So, if (and remember, I'm speaking hypothetically here), Clear Channel gets too far in over their heads, and Premiere goes bust around it, declaring bankruptcy and re-negotiating or canceling high dollar contracts is a very distinct possibility. That's what Rush sees. And, he's right to be thinking about it. I hope he's saved his millions well, for his sake.
Actually, Ms. MusicRadio, I too wish the "good old days" could come back. So, I do share your sentiment. I just know the business and political realities of radio today. Even if the government broke up Clear Channel, forced them to sell 700 radio stations, little would change in the day to day economics of radio. Live 24/7 programming would not come back, because there's too much savings to be made by syndicating or voicetracking. You'd have more owners unable to pay good money for talent, operating on a shoestring...with fewer options other than to be jukeboxes.
I worked for a Mom & Pop station in the early 80's. I have no doubt that had a means existed to have only a live morning show, and everybody else voice-tracking part-time, that the manager of the station would have taken that option in a heartbeat.
And those same economic realities exist today.