Brian, I don't consider myself, Al, David or any of the others mentioned here, icons. All of us recognize things change and audiences change but radio is about giving the local audience what they want and having capable people be able to sell the message. Al Cohen is still modern enough in his thinking he could operate a successful station in any small market.
A big part of WTIF's problem stems from owners who paid way too much money for the stations and in their desperation to turn things around and stem their losses, have tried everything to overcome the fact they obviously don't need to be in the business. Those type operations are tough for anyone to survive and I advise people to not work in those type places if it can be avoided.
As for multi-tasking, I've been in radio since 1977 and I've yet to work in any radio station that an employee did just one thing except the local news director. I personally don't think a newsman should do anything but news..all good local news. I would make an exception for off air operations managers also doing local news.
Much of the blame for radio's perceived demise is the attitude you can't do it like it was done 10, 20 or 30 years ago. I beg to differ. What made radio successful following the invention of TV still works today. The way you do it may have changed and the number of communities which still have viable enough advertising markets to support such an operation may be fewer..but the principles of what makes local radio successful is still very much the same. A good example is WSB in Atlanta. I remember them well when they played music. The station's success was built on local news and information. Trust me it wasn't the music. People didn't jump for joy when Roger Whitaker came on to sign. You can't play music on AM in a major market and be #1 but WSB is still a local news and information station that people in Atlanta know to turn to to find out what's happening...and there are a lot of new people in Atlanta and young people in Atlanta who don't remember the Voice of the South from White Columns on Peachtree Street or Elmo Ellis' editorials.
Come to think of it, all the great small town radio stations I remember from the "past", that is what set them apart. They were community information sources. Nowadays on AM, it's usually news-talk filler between the features that maintain that "image."
Another problem may well be that many of those in small town radio today have never actually worked in a small market station that is doing well since there seem to fewer and fewer examples of them out there.
While I respect Art Sutton and his time and tradition as a 'icon' or of the 'old guard' with Al Cohen and David Haire of WTIF, the time of these old giants is no more. The reason why you all think Tifton radio is a disgrace is because it is done the way you did it 40 years ago. Let me tell you something the PD for WTIF and the PD(s) for WKZZ really do care about local radio. Corporate atmospheres and stretched budgets are to blame. Back 40 years ago you people all had one job each. One guy was the 'morning show guy', one was the news guy, or two. One was the engineer or you maybe had 2. You had interns running wild ready to help out, you had a GM and his job was to, guess what General Manage, not do 3 remotes on saturday. You had 2 office girls, plus another one to do traffic, you had Account Executives who were pounding the pavement, you had a production director who did production, everyone had their job. Nowadays, GM's, PD"s, and if you are lucky you have an engineer that MAY come in and repair equipment, GM's are expected to do remotes and sell and manage and come up with promotions, PD's are along the same lines, make sure the station is on air, do some jerry rigging to equipment, do music changes, (if you arent satellite), imaging, production, client damage control for IDIOT accoutn executives, make sure your board ops are there on time for the ga game, can I keep going? I could fill up a couple pages probably. The game has changed folks, corporate has squeezed us because they gotta make a profit. It is getting harder and harder to make a profit because corporate wont hire any one who lets them use their creative minds to make a LOCAL, fresh station sound, nor will they allow for new fresh ideas or killer imaging.
What really sells a station now? How cheap of a package can I get for my dollar?
BTW, WTIF is NOT on a bird. It is a format that is programmed by a programmer, not a PD that programs 80 stations in a facility out in california. Cont. Christian is NOT an atrocious format. The format has not had enough time to mature yet in the eyes of others so it is easy to pick on it. It is a hard format to sell but if you can make it sell like KXOJ gets it sold, then you have better sales numbers then any AC station in the area.
I am all about old school radio and the good ol days, proverbially and I respect our predescessors, immensely, you can ask Al Cohen about that fact, personally, but why does every one have a negative attitude towards ANYTHING that Three Trees Communications does? They try to do things differently, they don't try to do it the 'tried and true' way which is BTW, quickly fading. Radio has found itself in a serious pickle and it has to be mobile in order to stay on the air. Three Trees deserves more credit for trying formats that no one else has the BALLS to try. While I am not burning bridges here with future gigs, I am simply a little irritated about negative attitude towards Tifton radio/Three Trees and the people that are involved in its current inception when its all corporate! Corporate has caused these issues.