I'm going to have to cheat a bit here and paste messages. This will be lengthy. In the EAS FAIL subject, Jon David Wells mentioned this. I responded, etc. etc. Here's a bit of 'catch up'
Since no one else can see the elephant in the room....
This test proves definitively that Radio's headlong rush to unmanned, network-syndicated, automated stations is a recipe for real civil disaster...
The fix:
•Licensed Operators per License, 24/7-365
•Broadcasters in Charge of the FCC
•Operate in the Public Interest, as a Public Trustee...That means spilling a little on your way to the bank as an investment in saving your Listener's lives in the Post 9-11 World.
If this wrecks your Business Model....Trying developing a Service Model instead. It sure works for Salem.
Jon-David Wells
The Wells Report
Jon-David, you have my vote to head the FCC. I have to ponder just how difficult it would be for stations to survive with those requirements.
Back when I began in radio in a small market, we had to be manned. We played records and carts. Our AP and NWS tickers were connected to long distance phone lines just like our network feed. For the price of a triple-decker cart machine I could buy a new car and pay sticker price. We not only had jocks for every shift but account executives, a secretary, a traffic person and staff engineer even in a small market. The monthly 'nut' had to be exceptional compared to the $2 spot rate for a 30. Even so, that station was financially successful.
Now there are many more options for advertisers and listeners but I realize those options are based on choice. We keep saying those 'good old days' are gone, a glaring fact, but might it be because we as an industry gave these competing options a leg to stand on? Nobody seems to consider the psychological effect radio had on listeners and ignores the fact this has not gone away.
While I'm in Houston, I have family in DFW and have heard you on your previous home as well as KSKY. The one thing that strikes me in the rise of talk radio over the yeas is the fact people tune in because they like you, the fact you say what they are thinking and the fact the listener feels they know you. Radio used to win ratings wars for those very reasons. Is not Talk Radio the 'personality radio' of the 1960s and 70s? If you took away the personality and listener interaction would talk radio survive (as if that was possible)?
Listeners want to feel their world is safe and radio used to serve this basic human need. Radio was a friend and listeners connected to their friends just as they do with tweets today. There were people I knew who thought stations such as KVIL in the 1970s were too easy or too Top 40 that listened not because of the music but the emotional connection.
I wonder if someone made that long-term investment if we might begin to recover what we lost. It would take a special investor, but I have a hunch that live, community oriented radio might win back some of those who today find radio irrevelant.
I think folks need to understand that being #1 12+ in the PPM and hitting your targeted demos is exceptional, but you don't have to score the biggest numbers to have a successful and appreciated station with good overall awareness that hits revenue targets. Of all the stations, there is only on at the top of the heap.
Licensed Operators is a good idea. I remember taking the 3rd class with broadcast endorsement. There were some questions that did not pertain to AM and FM radio at the time, but you knew the rules. I've worked under PDs that did not even know what a legal ID consisted of.
Thanks for your kind words on this very important topic. I have long admired your stances on the future of our industry, and hope that at some point, "Radio as a Stock Option" devolves into "Radio for Listeners" again.
For those who believe that this era of "lowest common denominator programming/squeeze every dime/who needs qualified programmers & talent anyway" Radio, please do note that as I write this, one of the most successful Coast-to-Coast Network Radio broadcasts is the half-hour infomercial for Purity Products Ultimate Prostate Formula.
(When I think of the withering criticism I got for using even one extra word on a break, or missing the boat on a relatable topic when everything I said in a 4-hour airshow telescoped into less than 10 minutes, only to listen to 2 men discussing excretory processes for 30 minutes straight, on 6 different stations 2-3 times per weekend per market...It's a wonder we have an industry at all.)
Now we have an Emergency Alert System in place, that can on a President's political whim, take over the National Radio Airwaves....THAT DOESN'T WORK. It didn't work on 9-11, it won't on the next 9-11 either....or the one after that....
Licensed Operators....Receiving Authenticated Alerts....making the decision to interrupt local broadcasts, "....In the event of a National Emergency..." is Radio for Listeners. Radio for your Neighbors. Radio as a Public Trustee.
Unfortunately, and soon to be tragically, it is not Radio for this quarter's arbitrary budget number.
There will be Radio Corporations what would have to adjust their business plans. They might have to sell a few stations...At some point, there may even be more than 6 Radio Corporations.
But if we do this, we may save a few (million) lives....
....OK, have it your way. A few million ways to reduce the cost per point a little.
J-D
TWR
THIS WAS WHERE IT ALL STARTED (no I'm not yelling, just distinguishing where my post rejoins. Several comments and good ones were posted beyond these entries but, let's pick up here.
I welcome your input for consideration.
Since no one else can see the elephant in the room....
This test proves definitively that Radio's headlong rush to unmanned, network-syndicated, automated stations is a recipe for real civil disaster...
The fix:
•Licensed Operators per License, 24/7-365
•Broadcasters in Charge of the FCC
•Operate in the Public Interest, as a Public Trustee...That means spilling a little on your way to the bank as an investment in saving your Listener's lives in the Post 9-11 World.
If this wrecks your Business Model....Trying developing a Service Model instead. It sure works for Salem.
Jon-David Wells
The Wells Report
Jon-David, you have my vote to head the FCC. I have to ponder just how difficult it would be for stations to survive with those requirements.
Back when I began in radio in a small market, we had to be manned. We played records and carts. Our AP and NWS tickers were connected to long distance phone lines just like our network feed. For the price of a triple-decker cart machine I could buy a new car and pay sticker price. We not only had jocks for every shift but account executives, a secretary, a traffic person and staff engineer even in a small market. The monthly 'nut' had to be exceptional compared to the $2 spot rate for a 30. Even so, that station was financially successful.
Now there are many more options for advertisers and listeners but I realize those options are based on choice. We keep saying those 'good old days' are gone, a glaring fact, but might it be because we as an industry gave these competing options a leg to stand on? Nobody seems to consider the psychological effect radio had on listeners and ignores the fact this has not gone away.
While I'm in Houston, I have family in DFW and have heard you on your previous home as well as KSKY. The one thing that strikes me in the rise of talk radio over the yeas is the fact people tune in because they like you, the fact you say what they are thinking and the fact the listener feels they know you. Radio used to win ratings wars for those very reasons. Is not Talk Radio the 'personality radio' of the 1960s and 70s? If you took away the personality and listener interaction would talk radio survive (as if that was possible)?
Listeners want to feel their world is safe and radio used to serve this basic human need. Radio was a friend and listeners connected to their friends just as they do with tweets today. There were people I knew who thought stations such as KVIL in the 1970s were too easy or too Top 40 that listened not because of the music but the emotional connection.
I wonder if someone made that long-term investment if we might begin to recover what we lost. It would take a special investor, but I have a hunch that live, community oriented radio might win back some of those who today find radio irrevelant.
I think folks need to understand that being #1 12+ in the PPM and hitting your targeted demos is exceptional, but you don't have to score the biggest numbers to have a successful and appreciated station with good overall awareness that hits revenue targets. Of all the stations, there is only on at the top of the heap.
Licensed Operators is a good idea. I remember taking the 3rd class with broadcast endorsement. There were some questions that did not pertain to AM and FM radio at the time, but you knew the rules. I've worked under PDs that did not even know what a legal ID consisted of.
Thanks for your kind words on this very important topic. I have long admired your stances on the future of our industry, and hope that at some point, "Radio as a Stock Option" devolves into "Radio for Listeners" again.
For those who believe that this era of "lowest common denominator programming/squeeze every dime/who needs qualified programmers & talent anyway" Radio, please do note that as I write this, one of the most successful Coast-to-Coast Network Radio broadcasts is the half-hour infomercial for Purity Products Ultimate Prostate Formula.
(When I think of the withering criticism I got for using even one extra word on a break, or missing the boat on a relatable topic when everything I said in a 4-hour airshow telescoped into less than 10 minutes, only to listen to 2 men discussing excretory processes for 30 minutes straight, on 6 different stations 2-3 times per weekend per market...It's a wonder we have an industry at all.)
Now we have an Emergency Alert System in place, that can on a President's political whim, take over the National Radio Airwaves....THAT DOESN'T WORK. It didn't work on 9-11, it won't on the next 9-11 either....or the one after that....
Licensed Operators....Receiving Authenticated Alerts....making the decision to interrupt local broadcasts, "....In the event of a National Emergency..." is Radio for Listeners. Radio for your Neighbors. Radio as a Public Trustee.
Unfortunately, and soon to be tragically, it is not Radio for this quarter's arbitrary budget number.
There will be Radio Corporations what would have to adjust their business plans. They might have to sell a few stations...At some point, there may even be more than 6 Radio Corporations.
But if we do this, we may save a few (million) lives....
....OK, have it your way. A few million ways to reduce the cost per point a little.
J-D
TWR
THIS WAS WHERE IT ALL STARTED (no I'm not yelling, just distinguishing where my post rejoins. Several comments and good ones were posted beyond these entries but, let's pick up here.
I welcome your input for consideration.