Lots of stuff to digest in here, thanks for making me think. 
Here's a question for the veterans: has this always been a big issue with radio, or is it something that has come out of corporate cookie cutter formatics? (Forgive me if I misused that word.) In other words, it seems like the big corporate owned stations have a formula that, after years of use, promotes TFOFS (Tuneout Finger of Fate Syndrome). And that formula is only letting the jock have a little time to talk right BEFORE a commercial break.
I hear them announce songs, weather, an occasional promo, but anything off the liner notes is a guaranteed lead-in to a six minute commercial break. This is not the case with small locally run stations or public radio shows, obviously, but it seems like if it's voicetracked or fed off a satellite, I can nail the commercial breaks 99% of the time by what the person starts talking about.
It's to the point where, no matter how hooked I might get by what is being said, I'm still hovering over the preset button because I know there's a hard segue to commercials lurking in the shadows. And I'm almost never ever wrong! It's very frustrating to be so mindlessly trained and is no doubt completely invalidating the commercial break.
Savage said:Otherwise the Dreaded Tuneout Finger Of Fate hovering over the radio faceplate descends....and you're fired, at least temporarily.
Here's a question for the veterans: has this always been a big issue with radio, or is it something that has come out of corporate cookie cutter formatics? (Forgive me if I misused that word.) In other words, it seems like the big corporate owned stations have a formula that, after years of use, promotes TFOFS (Tuneout Finger of Fate Syndrome). And that formula is only letting the jock have a little time to talk right BEFORE a commercial break.
I hear them announce songs, weather, an occasional promo, but anything off the liner notes is a guaranteed lead-in to a six minute commercial break. This is not the case with small locally run stations or public radio shows, obviously, but it seems like if it's voicetracked or fed off a satellite, I can nail the commercial breaks 99% of the time by what the person starts talking about.
It's to the point where, no matter how hooked I might get by what is being said, I'm still hovering over the preset button because I know there's a hard segue to commercials lurking in the shadows. And I'm almost never ever wrong! It's very frustrating to be so mindlessly trained and is no doubt completely invalidating the commercial break.