Let me see if I can put this succinctly, in terms you can understand:
You don't have to be a unique talent to deliver unique information.
You can automate some formats because nobody expects anything more than music. We're already seeing those formats being co-opted by satellite and on-line. If local broadcasting is going to survive, they'll have to offer more than that. That doesn't mean that you can automate all formats, or that music on radio is dead. More than 90% of the audience still listens to radio because it's EASY, and provides something more than a jukebox.
"Talent gets hired for its talent, not its musical knowledge." Maybe morning show talent - because THEY DON'T PLAY MUSIC ANYWAY. BTW, the number of programmers who pull an airshift these days is probably higher than it's ever been, if you count voice tracking. And they program multiple stations to boot.
You don't have to be a unique talent to deliver unique information.
You can automate some formats because nobody expects anything more than music. We're already seeing those formats being co-opted by satellite and on-line. If local broadcasting is going to survive, they'll have to offer more than that. That doesn't mean that you can automate all formats, or that music on radio is dead. More than 90% of the audience still listens to radio because it's EASY, and provides something more than a jukebox.
"Talent gets hired for its talent, not its musical knowledge." Maybe morning show talent - because THEY DON'T PLAY MUSIC ANYWAY. BTW, the number of programmers who pull an airshift these days is probably higher than it's ever been, if you count voice tracking. And they program multiple stations to boot.