When listening to the radio in the morning, would you rather hear a syndicated morning radio show or a local one and why?
Todd said:When listening to the radio in the morning, would you rather hear a syndicated morning radio show or a local one and why?
Radio_Realist said:Did that once about five years ago at WJJJ. Exactly once. Hated the results. Never did it again.
But did the audience hate the result? Isn't it the audience's opinion that should matter the most?
Radio_Realist said:it was so obvious to me that I was not live that I did not do it again.
It must be great to be the boss and have the luxury of choosing to be live even if it wouldn't be economically feasible if you had to pay someone else to do the shift.
i was listening to 'dve this morning, and heard the bit about "the creepy parents"...no kidding, got to work today, word for word from the complete sheet...the only thing they did was add a donald trump bit at the end about him and his daughter...an imitation...which was actually news about 4 or 6 months ago...it was an ok bit...for an afternoon or night show...but...'dve...morning drive...don't get it...Radio_Realist said:When listening to the radio in the morning, I want to hear an entertaining show. Whether it is local or coming in from out of town is only one very small factor in determining whether a show is entertaining or not. I think the majority of radio listeners feel the exact same way, even though everyone has a different opinion about what they find entertaining.
Sure, it's great to have local traffic reports, but syndicated shows can have such reports dropped in by the local station the same way the local station drops in commercials. It's great to have really funny local jokes, but a lame local joke isn't as good as a really funny national themed joke. I'm sure that if you looked hard enough, you could find some people who think any local joke is automatically funnier than a joke with no local flavor. But I don't think such people constitute a majority of those who listen to the radio.
Many, many people in here have listed things program elements that can only be done locally. But, if the local hosts don't do a very good and entertaining job of providing local flavor, then being local won't make a boring bit funny.
The 'DVE Morning Show is both local and funny, even if it's not nearly as funny as I remember it being before Krenn got bored with it all. I'd pick it ahead of a syndicated show that wasn't as funny, like the Bob & Tom show that WRRK carried after Quinn left them. But, after listening to the morning shows on 100.7 and 3WS, I'd take the Bob and Tom shows over either of them. Most of the people in my office agree with me, which is why the office radio is usually on 'DVE in the morning.
And, there are some people who simply want music in the morning, and those people would prefer a station in which the DJ's mostly kept quiet and only opened the mic a few times an hour. To those people who only tune in for the music, whether those few words spoken between songs were local or syndicated is probably irrelevant.
lash said:The technology today is amazing on voice tracking. As one of the greatest jocks of all time, Jackson Armstrong did in Buffalo, his voice tracking was just as outstanding as him being there live.
I'll go on record again, voicetracking sounding local is ten times better than an automated jukebox. And you don't have to put up with their egos either.
cingram said:The irony of it all is that we had a board-op on duty, in the studio, to make sure the voice tracks played as scheduled and who could jump on the air if they didn't. The next time we ran into that situation, we brought in a part-timer to do the show (which we should have done to begin with).
kenhawk1160 said:Cary Simpson once said in a Radio Ink interview that a common reason why people listen to radio is that they don't want to feel alone. When you have that human element, you don't feel alone. Let's face it...we'd all like to have big budgets and be able to have live talent in our studios like the good old days. But that's not possible anymore. This is what we have to do in order to stay competitive these days.
You've got to have that human element there. This is how stations like the ones in Latrobe, Uniontown, Indiana, and Homer City (all of which are satellite) survive. I find that a jukebox that does nothing but play songs back to back with little if anything in between for 15 minutes an absolute bore. John Longo said in a Trib interview that with his WCNS "you can pop in an oldies CD and listen to that. It's what we do in between the music that makes us unique." He took not one, but TWO radio stations that were literally a joke in their own communities and turned them into real profitable operations...while MAINTAINING a very local image.