Re: it got yanked...
yeah same song and dance I have heard before, but don't try to tell me how to react to something, if I want to spend my time venting how I feel, I have that right, if you don't agree with my posts here then don't reply I don't want to hear what you have to say anyways. I want to see posts from other listeners not you radio guys who feel its the nature of the business.
> > Would you send it to me as well?
> >
> >
[email protected]
> >
>
> Remember when KLOL was yanked? Outlaw Dave and Wendy Miller,
> two Houston radio legends got a minute long phone call
> telling them not to come to work.
> That was pretty crappy.
> Kaos, you think yanking R&R was any different? Of course
> not.
>
> Radio is impersonal because it is a shark of a business. Cut
> throat and demeaning.
>
> People are let go all the time and you can only hope that
> "the boss" finds a humane way to do it. Usually this is not
> the case.
>
> What execs and programmers on this board need to remember is
> that "listener perception" rules, and I think for the most
> part they do. Higher ups like Ken Charles don't care about
> petitions and flaming posts on message boards because they
> don't have to.
>
> That doesn't remedy people like you who lost a favorite
> morning show, or a part of your morning routine.
>
> When a radio program is cut, somebody always loses. That's
> inevitable.
>
> It just means that company decided those people were less
> important and that a greater audience potential existed in
> hiring someone else.
>
> Ask a local DJ whether or not radio is a fun business,
> something a young kid should aspire to.
>
> Usual response--HELL NO!!!!
>
> DJ's like R&R who are in radio are in it because they love
> being behind the microphone and serving listeners enough to
> risk not living in the same city for more than a year,
> sometimes a matter of months.
>
> I feel your grief Kaos, but I can only agree with the
> others.
>
> This is radio. Get used to it.
>