Oh, we're awake, Bub. If anybody has seen consolidation outside of radio, and had to adapt to new economic realities, it's those of us who are either still in Buffalo, or back in Buffalo after a foray to "new horizons". We also understand that the decline in the quality of media goes far beyond local radio.
Computers have taken the jobs of many people. Computers, as a tool, are wonderful devices. The increase in productivity by skilled people is amazing. In fact, it's so great that the 1% discovered that they could cut a lot of people. What they failed to realize is that the people they cut had skills and knowledge that couldn't be duplicated by a computer. Yes, one programming can crank out playlists for mulitiple stations, and even multiple markets. No, one programming can't be really responsive to mulitple audiences in multiple markets. Yes, one voice-tracker can lay down breaks for multiple stations in multiple markets. No, one voice-tracker can't provide "in the moment" relatability and timeliness in multiple stations in multiple markets - especially when something unusual happens.
Radio has ALWAYS had competition from other devices - from 78s to 45s to 33s, 8-tracks, cassettes, CDs, and now MP3s. Recent studies indicate that sampling of radio by younger demos is still very strong, and that music radio is still a major force in music discovery. They just don't listen nearly as long because they're turned off by the repetitive and predictable content.
On the news side, there was MUCH more competition in the past. Multiple news staffs, and multiple media - each with a much larger staff than now. WBEN's news department is a shadow of its former self - and they're the only commercial game in town. The local pubcasters have very limited news resources, and I don't expect that the coming consolidation between WNED and WBFO will mean a big increase in shared news staff. TV staffs have been decimated, and the people left have been issued backpacks in too many cases. We're becoming the least informed people in several generations because there's plenty of opinion, but precious little REPORTING. And people wonder why there's so much division in this country?
Engineering is a travesty. Solid state transmitters, improved processing, auto loggers, better (and cheaper) STLs, and a lot of other improvements reduced the amount of time that engineers had to spend on the RF side. Unfortunately, clueless management decided that RF and electronics engineers should also be responsible for IT - an ENTIRELY different skill set, requiring an entirely different knowledge base. The guys who could - and wanted to - adapted. Others moved on, or were forced out as groups consolidated and 1 or 2 guys were asked to do the job formerly performed by 6 or 8. Small stations went to contract engineers, and treated them like firemen. Preventive maintenance is a joke. Physical plant at transmitters is treated like a red-headed stepchild. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." How many times do you have to put tower painting in the budget request before it's granted? It'll be approved about the time the NAL comes from the FCC, or the FAA makes a call. And then, it'll be the engineer's fault.
Is this all because of a decrease in market size? Some, not all. Is it because of better technology? Once again, some, not all. Is it because the information is available from other sources? Rarely. Mostly, it's because some fat cats decided that the 40% profit margin of radio was pretty darn attractive compared to the 4% they were getting on their Walmart stock. They paid stupid amounts of money for broadcast facilities, figuring that they maintain the profit margins while cutting expenses (i.e. talent in programming, sales, and engineering). What they failed to understand is that radio, in particular, is local, and has been for generations. When they cut the quality of the product, people went looking elsewhere. Their time sucked, because the Internet was there waiting to fill the void.
Audiences already lost TV to mostly national programming. They don't want to lose radio. The rating tell the story in market after market after market. The stations with the largest amount of live and local content win in the ratings. CC is trying to change the game, and sell listeners on the idea that "we have better entertainment" because they've got guys from bigger markets syndicated or tracked in smaller markets. I guess we'll see how that pans out. In the past, local talent has beaten syndication when it was allowed to compete. Let's hope some of the broadcasters out there see this as an opportunity to take on Clear Channel and offer listeners a chance to show them the error of their ways.
Computers have taken the jobs of many people. Computers, as a tool, are wonderful devices. The increase in productivity by skilled people is amazing. In fact, it's so great that the 1% discovered that they could cut a lot of people. What they failed to realize is that the people they cut had skills and knowledge that couldn't be duplicated by a computer. Yes, one programming can crank out playlists for mulitiple stations, and even multiple markets. No, one programming can't be really responsive to mulitple audiences in multiple markets. Yes, one voice-tracker can lay down breaks for multiple stations in multiple markets. No, one voice-tracker can't provide "in the moment" relatability and timeliness in multiple stations in multiple markets - especially when something unusual happens.
Radio has ALWAYS had competition from other devices - from 78s to 45s to 33s, 8-tracks, cassettes, CDs, and now MP3s. Recent studies indicate that sampling of radio by younger demos is still very strong, and that music radio is still a major force in music discovery. They just don't listen nearly as long because they're turned off by the repetitive and predictable content.
On the news side, there was MUCH more competition in the past. Multiple news staffs, and multiple media - each with a much larger staff than now. WBEN's news department is a shadow of its former self - and they're the only commercial game in town. The local pubcasters have very limited news resources, and I don't expect that the coming consolidation between WNED and WBFO will mean a big increase in shared news staff. TV staffs have been decimated, and the people left have been issued backpacks in too many cases. We're becoming the least informed people in several generations because there's plenty of opinion, but precious little REPORTING. And people wonder why there's so much division in this country?
Engineering is a travesty. Solid state transmitters, improved processing, auto loggers, better (and cheaper) STLs, and a lot of other improvements reduced the amount of time that engineers had to spend on the RF side. Unfortunately, clueless management decided that RF and electronics engineers should also be responsible for IT - an ENTIRELY different skill set, requiring an entirely different knowledge base. The guys who could - and wanted to - adapted. Others moved on, or were forced out as groups consolidated and 1 or 2 guys were asked to do the job formerly performed by 6 or 8. Small stations went to contract engineers, and treated them like firemen. Preventive maintenance is a joke. Physical plant at transmitters is treated like a red-headed stepchild. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." How many times do you have to put tower painting in the budget request before it's granted? It'll be approved about the time the NAL comes from the FCC, or the FAA makes a call. And then, it'll be the engineer's fault.
Is this all because of a decrease in market size? Some, not all. Is it because of better technology? Once again, some, not all. Is it because the information is available from other sources? Rarely. Mostly, it's because some fat cats decided that the 40% profit margin of radio was pretty darn attractive compared to the 4% they were getting on their Walmart stock. They paid stupid amounts of money for broadcast facilities, figuring that they maintain the profit margins while cutting expenses (i.e. talent in programming, sales, and engineering). What they failed to understand is that radio, in particular, is local, and has been for generations. When they cut the quality of the product, people went looking elsewhere. Their time sucked, because the Internet was there waiting to fill the void.
Audiences already lost TV to mostly national programming. They don't want to lose radio. The rating tell the story in market after market after market. The stations with the largest amount of live and local content win in the ratings. CC is trying to change the game, and sell listeners on the idea that "we have better entertainment" because they've got guys from bigger markets syndicated or tracked in smaller markets. I guess we'll see how that pans out. In the past, local talent has beaten syndication when it was allowed to compete. Let's hope some of the broadcasters out there see this as an opportunity to take on Clear Channel and offer listeners a chance to show them the error of their ways.