B
bierkenstock
Guest
The song says video killed the radio star. I doubt it.
It does seem, however, the DJ is dead. But from the 40's through the 70's, the DJ was the radio star. I can't think of any real DJ's still around any more. A few remaining oldies stations may have recycled AM top 40 DJ's from when the music and the audience were young. But in a way, these DJ's constantly doing their old bits are like museum exhibits. Very sad.
Many stations have morning shows with teams or duos, but they aren't really doing a DJ show. Many did start out as jocks but that's not the act they are doing now.
Many stations have announcers (live or voice tracked) who give the the time or introduce traffic reports but these are not real DJ's either.
Real jocks were personalities who - in the best tradition of the old time radio performers who went before them - created a radio persona and demonstrated showmanship. They built a show around music they selected and comments they chose to make.
Bill Drake delivered what might be the first fatal blow. Jocks had already been ordered to stick to playlists, but Drake muzzled them. Time. Temperature. Call Letters. Don't talk for more than 10 seconds. Stick to the rotation. Some guys pushed the envelope and let some personality through. But consultants kept referring to research saying DJ's talked too much. Maybe so. Not all DJ's were great (we only remember the great ones). For an untalented jock, opening his mouth was talking too much. Some of the talented ones just forgot about the records and just kept talking - Don Imus, Howard Stern and - of course - Jeff Christie.*
However it happened, DJ radio is dead. Except maybe in the minds of some kids who never heard a real jock and none-the-less aspire to be one.
It does seem, however, the DJ is dead. But from the 40's through the 70's, the DJ was the radio star. I can't think of any real DJ's still around any more. A few remaining oldies stations may have recycled AM top 40 DJ's from when the music and the audience were young. But in a way, these DJ's constantly doing their old bits are like museum exhibits. Very sad.
Many stations have morning shows with teams or duos, but they aren't really doing a DJ show. Many did start out as jocks but that's not the act they are doing now.
Many stations have announcers (live or voice tracked) who give the the time or introduce traffic reports but these are not real DJ's either.
Real jocks were personalities who - in the best tradition of the old time radio performers who went before them - created a radio persona and demonstrated showmanship. They built a show around music they selected and comments they chose to make.
Bill Drake delivered what might be the first fatal blow. Jocks had already been ordered to stick to playlists, but Drake muzzled them. Time. Temperature. Call Letters. Don't talk for more than 10 seconds. Stick to the rotation. Some guys pushed the envelope and let some personality through. But consultants kept referring to research saying DJ's talked too much. Maybe so. Not all DJ's were great (we only remember the great ones). For an untalented jock, opening his mouth was talking too much. Some of the talented ones just forgot about the records and just kept talking - Don Imus, Howard Stern and - of course - Jeff Christie.*
However it happened, DJ radio is dead. Except maybe in the minds of some kids who never heard a real jock and none-the-less aspire to be one.