https://www.tennessean.com/story/sp...-titans-predators-vols-vanderbilt/1998932001/
I wonder what happened here....
I wonder what happened here....
BigA - translate your thoughts, please. (I think this bomb was expected, but man....less than four weeks?) There are quite a lot of rough issues in here.
Have you ever had buyer's remorse? I have. Sometimes the idea is better than the reality.
Plaster has been off the radio for how long? His act needs phone calls, and I bet he didn't get many. After 4 weeks, they had talked to all of the listeners ten times already. I've done talk shows with no calls, and it's tough.
Someone needs to get ahold of all the missteps with this station. It cannot tolerate many more.
I agree with everything you said in the previous post.
With regards to 650, I really think the days of attracting any usable audience on an AM, even a 50K AM with heritage, are about over. I sense the folks in Atlanta are thinking about transitioning WSB completely over to the FM simulcast, and jettisoning 750. If that happens, what else is left?
I am not sure we can totally fault the content, BigA,
When you give listeners a choice by airing the same content on a 50KW heritage AM and a full market FM, and a majority of them choose the FM, what does that tell you? That's what they're seeing in Atlanta with WSB. What should they do?
This. What I don't get is why the owners of WSM-AM sold WSM 95.5. Wsan't there a simulcast at one time? With no translator, and car streaming not quite here yet, they seem to be pushing the stream a lot. it just looks like they need either a translator or a full FM for simulcast. Your thoughts?
If WSM is their only remaining (radio) holding, then it cannot even be a "loss leader." It is just simply a loss for them.
My recollection was that at the time of the sale, Gaylord wanted out of broadcasting as they were going full tilt after the hospitality market. But they saw WSM as a key element in marketing the Opry, and kept it as they wanted the actual on-air broadcasts to continue.
If he didn't burn his bridges with them, he could probably go back. As it is, he is probably fairly close to retirement age, anyway.I probably shouldn’t feel too sorry for George Plaster. He’s probably made more off of his sports talk show than most of us will ever see, and he likely had a contract with Ryman that will have to get bought out.
I do, however, really hate when companies hire people away from good jobs only to cut them shortly afterward. This happens a lot in radio but is common everywhere. Plaster had what looked like a good job at Belmont. Now, he doesn’t have that, and he doesn’t have a job at WSM either. I realize nobody forced him to leave Belmont, but companies have a way of presenting themselves as good opportunities only to throw the people they hire under the bus.
If WSM is their only remaining (radio) holding, then it cannot even be a "loss leader." It is just simply a loss for them.
If he didn't burn his bridges with them, he could probably go back. As it is, he is probably fairly close to retirement age, anyway.
The only one who I ever remember doing that was Dan Miller. He went out to L.A. with Pat Sajak and became Sajak's sidekick on Sajak's late-night talk show. If that show had made it, Miller might have stayed out in L.A. I was still living in west TN at the time, and did not know who Miller was. I remember thinking "I know that guy from somewhere" after moving here and seeing him host a local talk show on channel 4. This was TV of course, and Miller "made it" here; he just didn't make it out in L.A. Would have been great if Sajak's show had made it, and Miller could have stayed on as his "Ed McMahon."I always tell people to look at one thing and one thing only when hiring - Track Record. Once you see that on a resume, you can easily decide how the hire will pan out. Then you look at potential and talent. Look how many GREAT radio "stars" came through Nashville back in the 60's, 70's and 80's. Pretty impressive. Ever notice that when a name would return to Nashville a few years later (or longer) they would almost always flame out within a matter of months? There is a sad cycle to this and radio in 2019 is not exactly the shining stardom of yesteryear.