Previously, several posters, including myself, started on the topic of the current viability and quality of "Imus In The Morning", 2010 version. The conversations have tilted far away from Imus and have headed towards Clear Channel, so I thought I'd save a moderator a few cogent keystrokes, and post my extremely opinionated responses here.....
Of course, there have been several books on Clear Channel, but only one or two have been fairly recent and have explored the recent and current financial problems which eventually led to CC selling off many assets and then selling off over half of itself. The Minot situation, which in my view exemplifies the inherent problems with lack of localism and the trend towards automated radio clusters and no personnel on site, is more of a "serving the public interest" issue - and a damn good one, too.
My negative views on Clear Channel cutbacks started before the current major downtrends in ad revenues began.....as things started to slow in 2005 {in my market, at least}, Clear Channel stations in my market began - slowly, but clearly at first - cutting staff. I was spared, but others were chopped {I was kinda handy to have around because I was willing to work boards on overnights, plus I had over 20 years on mike...}
I saw corners being cut, news stories not fully vetted, questionable editing practices that led to several more frequent complaints from interviewees in news stories accusing the News Department of slanting the stories - all this along with a gradual but inevitable decline in broadcast quality. Every one of the decisions that led to these changes came down from on top - I actually was told this by a visiting VP of some department, who urged us who survived the first cuts to not only pick up the slack, but increase our output.....the veiled threat from the fairly-empty suit was clear. After I quit in 2005, the cuts were more frequent and slashing, and I was told by someone still there morale was somber.
I hate to be argumentative, Big A, but Feder's analogy is almost spot on - if you can forget that Mickey D's sometimes uses outsourced people to take drive-up orders - the point being there are live, local bodies at the home of The Big Mac....and frequently, CC studios are aglow of automation equipment screens with no one looking at them.
Matt Parker's chicken & egg question is also valid - was it the consumer who left radio, or did radio let down the audience? That one has the earmarks of a donnybrook........
My main point of bringing up Clear Channel's fall from exalted profits to selling a majority share after a fire sale was that, even in the weakened state of ad revenues that radio continues to find itself, I wanted to know HOW CC accomplished this feat - was it all out-of-corporate's hands, all market forces beyond CC's control, or did cheapening the product for the sake of the profits lend a hand in this decay?
Of course, technological advancements made a huge difference - corporate radio couldn't shove the iPod or streaming radio onto a disadvantaged shelf like RCA and others did to Armstrong's FM.
I guess the age old argument remains this: would a better product sell itself to a bigger audience and more advertisers? I doubt there are many in current corporate radio who would dare to pick up that gauntlet.....
Of course, there have been several books on Clear Channel, but only one or two have been fairly recent and have explored the recent and current financial problems which eventually led to CC selling off many assets and then selling off over half of itself. The Minot situation, which in my view exemplifies the inherent problems with lack of localism and the trend towards automated radio clusters and no personnel on site, is more of a "serving the public interest" issue - and a damn good one, too.
My negative views on Clear Channel cutbacks started before the current major downtrends in ad revenues began.....as things started to slow in 2005 {in my market, at least}, Clear Channel stations in my market began - slowly, but clearly at first - cutting staff. I was spared, but others were chopped {I was kinda handy to have around because I was willing to work boards on overnights, plus I had over 20 years on mike...}
I saw corners being cut, news stories not fully vetted, questionable editing practices that led to several more frequent complaints from interviewees in news stories accusing the News Department of slanting the stories - all this along with a gradual but inevitable decline in broadcast quality. Every one of the decisions that led to these changes came down from on top - I actually was told this by a visiting VP of some department, who urged us who survived the first cuts to not only pick up the slack, but increase our output.....the veiled threat from the fairly-empty suit was clear. After I quit in 2005, the cuts were more frequent and slashing, and I was told by someone still there morale was somber.
I hate to be argumentative, Big A, but Feder's analogy is almost spot on - if you can forget that Mickey D's sometimes uses outsourced people to take drive-up orders - the point being there are live, local bodies at the home of The Big Mac....and frequently, CC studios are aglow of automation equipment screens with no one looking at them.
Matt Parker's chicken & egg question is also valid - was it the consumer who left radio, or did radio let down the audience? That one has the earmarks of a donnybrook........
My main point of bringing up Clear Channel's fall from exalted profits to selling a majority share after a fire sale was that, even in the weakened state of ad revenues that radio continues to find itself, I wanted to know HOW CC accomplished this feat - was it all out-of-corporate's hands, all market forces beyond CC's control, or did cheapening the product for the sake of the profits lend a hand in this decay?
Of course, technological advancements made a huge difference - corporate radio couldn't shove the iPod or streaming radio onto a disadvantaged shelf like RCA and others did to Armstrong's FM.
I guess the age old argument remains this: would a better product sell itself to a bigger audience and more advertisers? I doubt there are many in current corporate radio who would dare to pick up that gauntlet.....