J
John-Summers
Guest
I started this topic because I was so tired of seeing the much-maligned Miss Kolvak at the top of the list.
Not long ago I saw that an old radio friend had been let go in a Clear Channel purge. He and I grew up in the same neighborhood and played midget baseball together. He was the catcher - and a damn good one - and I was on the bench most of the time. He is a talented man who has done radio all his adult life. And he is one of the many talented personalities I know - in this area and beyond - who are on the street. Many are pushing 60. Who would have thought at 20 or 30 that our way of making a living - insecure as it was - would virtually disappear, like manufacturing buggy whips and high-button shoes. I still do radio on Saturdays in Baltimore, just because it's fun and it pays a few bills. During the week I work behind the scenes at a local TV station. The work is creative and I enjoy it, but it's only a little more secure than a radio job.
I wonder what people who have spent their lives in the radio business are to do once they are pushed out. Heck, you can't even get a job as a clerk in a state liquor store these days! Some of you have moved beyond radio. What advice do you have? Where does someone who has done radio all their lives go once it's over?
Not long ago I saw that an old radio friend had been let go in a Clear Channel purge. He and I grew up in the same neighborhood and played midget baseball together. He was the catcher - and a damn good one - and I was on the bench most of the time. He is a talented man who has done radio all his adult life. And he is one of the many talented personalities I know - in this area and beyond - who are on the street. Many are pushing 60. Who would have thought at 20 or 30 that our way of making a living - insecure as it was - would virtually disappear, like manufacturing buggy whips and high-button shoes. I still do radio on Saturdays in Baltimore, just because it's fun and it pays a few bills. During the week I work behind the scenes at a local TV station. The work is creative and I enjoy it, but it's only a little more secure than a radio job.
I wonder what people who have spent their lives in the radio business are to do once they are pushed out. Heck, you can't even get a job as a clerk in a state liquor store these days! Some of you have moved beyond radio. What advice do you have? Where does someone who has done radio all their lives go once it's over?