DavidZ said:Anyone see the irony of Barry going head to head now against his long running Money Matters radio show that he formally hosted with the move to 9 a.m.? Does Barry Armstrong still have a vested interest in the station(s) running the syndicated Money Matters radio shows?
LAUROJRM said:If I can be Assistant PD, I would make that station SHINE!!!!!
ChrisNH said:I don't listen to AM radio any more...a vast plea for advertising dollars is all AM radio exists for. As soon as WBZ started making every single thing they said a 'Brought to you by...' sponsor-fest, and as soon as their top-of-the-hour news came one or two minutes late because they were too busy squashing in commercials, I gave up. That I'm an Arbitron meter household gives me tremendous satisfaction because I only listen to Podcasts exclusively in the car. Happily, my listening choices are extrapolated across many more listeners because I wear a meter. Because WBZ felt the need to bludgeon me with their endless commercials several years ago, I quite happily bludgeon them right back with my Arbitron meter. And I get paid by Arbitron to do that bludgeoning!
Laurence Glavin said:ChrisNH said:I don't listen to AM radio any more...
Why haven't you been able to boost WXKS-AM 1200's rating?
Once you became an Arbitron "family", it must have occurred to you that you COULD boost the rating of a preferred station, especially one that parrots your bizarre opinions. Thus for the duration, you could have made WXKS-AM a listening choice. Lately, it HAS edged up above the 6-figure cume, but I guess that's happened without your participation.dumber than a box of hair said:Laurence Glavin said:ChrisNH said:I don't listen to AM radio any more...
Why haven't you been able to boost WXKS-AM 1200's rating?
What part of "I don't listen to AM radio any more" do you not understand?
Laurence Glavin said:Once you became an Arbitron "family", it must have occurred to you that you COULD boost the rating of a preferred station, especially one that parrots your bizarre opinions. Thus for the duration, you could have made WXKS-AM a listening choice. Lately, it HAS edged up above the 6-figure cume, but I guess that's happened without your participation.
Laurence Glavin said:Today's (Saturday 02/18) NY Times has a feature story on the price of gasoline and how it could be used by Republicans to hammer President Obama on the economy. In the body of the article it's mentioned that the price of oil on the spot market is out any administration's control. Turmoil in the Middle East, ranging from violence in Syria to changes in government elsewhere there plus Iran's threat to close off the Strait of Hormuz, has led to a price runup on the options market. A growing middle class in Asia is also impacting gasoline prices. Now neutrino-brained presidential candidates are saying THEY could lower gasoline prices! Duh. They've made so many promises to turn the clock back (including women's health issues) they're issuing tiny diamond-shaped stickers to put at 640 and 1240 on any radios people own to bring back the Conelrad days. Since WEEI-AM&FM and WRKO are right-wing tinged, they may be inserting "business reports" only to portray the economy as still in decline.
Laurence Glavin said:For several years, I constantly complained about the very limited playlist of classical and half-classical music WCRB broadcast when it was a commercial operation owned by Charles River Breeding Laboratories, I Mean Charles River Broadcasting (I always get them mixed up) and pre-bankruptcy Nassau. They RESOLUTELY refused to play pieces that people who cared about classical music LOVED while endlessly replaying crap that NOBODY cared about. Two examples...a syrupy piece of glop by Gerald Finzi for piano and strings, and a set of short orchestral pieces by Tomaso Albinoni. People here are constantly complaining about the way that stations that play mass-marketed recorded material play the same pieces over and over...and right-wingers write that radio stations are in the business of providing fare that people want. For over a decade, WCRB violated both those precepts. At least in diaries, WCRB might have gotten a higher rating number, but if that was reflective of actual radio listening, people were using the station as a latter-day WJIB-FM as background music.