Is the present WHTT weekday line-up permanent, with Lacy & Huber in mornings, Pastrick 10-2, Val Townsend from the Edge 2-4, Harv Moor from 4-7 and Siragusa from 7 to 12? That's a peculiar sequence of time slots. Wasn't Harv Moor supposed to retire?
Wasn't Harv Moor supposed to retire?
It will be a sad day when that happens. Harv is an original.
He stops in to visit Harv on occasion and has, from time to time, done a "once in a blue moon" airshift at WHTT and always sounds great.
Element9 said:Airshift? Hmmm... there was a time when jocks were personalities and did shows.
SirRoxalot said:Element9 said:Airshift? Hmmm... there was a time when jocks were personalities and did shows.
Hmmm... there was a time when jocks were hosts, bought blocks of airtime, picked their own music, got their own payola, and sold their own commercials, and were responsible for the content of that block. There was also a time when people sat in front of the radio, giving it their undivided attention, and visualizing the scenes being played out by actors with the help of sound effects.
Nowdays, music is product, computers generate playlists, and airstaff do airshifts. The difference between announcers and air personalities is that air personalities use their format-limited opportunities to add information and entertainment to the basic formatics and liners.
Listen to WHTT as it's evolved, and compare it to WJYE and Star. Yes, there are differences in the music, but the most pronounced difference is in the personalities that deliver that music. How many of you guys in the biz want to claim everything that's on the air during YOUR airshift as part of YOUR show?
SirRoxalot said:Element9 said:Airshift? Hmmm... there was a time when jocks were personalities and did shows.
Nowdays, music is product,
Clear Channel has indeed said in the past that they were "in the commercial business," and the music was secondary, but that's certainly not the case at every chain.
We may not get it right every time, but some of us put forth a lot of effort, time, research, and yes: PRIDE into the programming of our stations at Citadel, Entercom, and Regent. Some of us want our listeners to make a real connection with our stations. We want our listeners to like the music we play, and to remember our personalities, and if they frequent our advertisers - that's part of the plan, of course, but it's not the only plan.
There's a lot of doom and gloom on this board, but guys - there are people who still care a lot about our business, and put in an awful lot of hours doing the absolute best we can. It's not all bad! And a lot of us read this board a lot, by the way.
What's ironic to me is that anyone working in radio would read this board and take anything seriously from it.
Since it's not the 1970s anymore, nothing anyone has to say here really pertains anymore. Are there any women who care about this, or any thread here? Anyone?
The silence is deafening.
The silence is deafening.
SirRoxalot said:There was also a time when people sat in front of the radio, giving it their undivided attention, and visualizing the scenes being played out by actors with the help of sound effects.