Perfectly said. Social media is where the users are the media
You mean the medium is the message? Or the massage? Technically, the medium is the medium. The users generate the content.
Perfectly said. Social media is where the users are the media
Of course, this is all about semantics. Definitions of what any "new media" term are varied, and seem to change every day.Perfectly said. Social media is where the users are the media -- often to the extreme of being a digital mirror that others simply watch you admiring yourself in. Classic venues for online group interaction like Usenet, listservs, and web forums should never have their reputations impugned by being equated to it.![]()
Heck, even the most well known news sites, from Fox and Breitbart to Huffington and the NYT have reader comment facilities. Isn't that "social media"? Some will say "yes" and others will disagree. Again, semantics.
I meant, and should have written, that the users are the content. So many people casually label the contents rather than the conduits "media" these days that I didn't notice myself doing it.You mean the medium is the message?Perfectly said. Social media is where the users are the media
I went through an experience when social media was new and all our air staff was told by management to open Facebook and Twitter accounts and participate.How does it affect radio? Some radio stations are paying talent based on engagement figures. They get paid a percentage of the revenue they create instead of a regular salary. If all they do is host a DJ show, they make less money than if they also do a podcast and social media. The metrics of social media are entering broadcasting. You wonder why veteran talent are retiring? Perhaps that's why.
I guess it would technically come down to what the provided discussion space was intended to facilitate. If the space was only meant for discussions within the topical scope of the article, then it wouldn't be social media, even if the scene of that activity was social in nature.Heck, even the most well known news sites, from Fox and Breitbart to Huffington and the NYT have reader comment facilities. Isn't that "social media"? Some will say "yes" and others will disagree. Again, semantics.
Can you please reply to every quote in the article I provided. I’m anxious to hear how wrong I am.Of course, this is all about semantics. Definitions of what any "new media" term are varied, and seem to change every day.
Heck, even the most well known news sites, from Fox and Breitbart to Huffington and the NYT have reader comment facilities. Isn't that "social media"? Some will say "yes" and others will disagree. Again, semantics.
Disagreeing does not mean either party is "wrong".Can you please reply to every quote in the article I provided. I’m anxious to hear how wrong I am.
They're really not. Because in those days you had a space in the dashboard where an aftermarket radio could be installed. That's really not the case for a Tesla (or, really, for any other modern new car).So Tesla is rolling back the clock to when any radio in a car was an "option". I remember plenty of cars with a steel plate in the dash where the buyer didn't cough up the extra $30 or so for an AM radio. I also remember when dealers would charge for a factory brand radio but then replace it with a cheaper unit and pocket the difference.
The TM Stereo Rock format was introduced in the early 70s, when Top 40 stations were still called "rockers", as per your comment. The AM Top 40 where I grew up had jingles reflecting that as late as 1976 ("85, K-T-A-C, rock and roll!"). It was the rise of tightly formatted album-oriented rock (AOR) stations that killed that, because by the end of the 70s, when listeners heard the term "rock" they thought of their local AOR outlet, and many of those stations used the on-air liner "[local area's] best rock" or variants of it.Remember that, from the mid 50's through the 60's and into the 70's Top 40 stations were called "rockers" as they played "Rock 'n' Roll". That was one of the terms applied to the music dating back at least to "Rock Around the Clock".
But I guess at that point it would have been difficult for TM Productions to change the name they'd given to that syndicated format, so it continued under that name until TM Productions exited the business in the mid-80s and sold off their format syndication business to (I think) Drake-Chenault.
Almost every tape-based syndicator ended up selling their client lists to either D-C or Broadcast Programming International at some point in the 1980s.
Hmmm. What was happening in the 80s was a conversion from tape to satellite. By the 80s, the radio networks had all converted from phone lines and tape or disc or satellite. Casey Kasem was no longer on 12" vinyl discs. He was either CD or satellite. The syndicators all had access to satellite. Plus by the mid-80s you had Satellite Music Networks and TranStar. Each of them ultimately sold to networks. SMN went to ABC and TranStar went to United Stations and became UniStar. In the 90s, UniStar was bought by Westwood One. By that time, TM was primarily in music distribution and jingle creation.
Thank you David. Sorry I get a little uptight sometimes. I just really care about our industry.Disagreeing does not mean either party is "wrong".
I have disagreed with some of the best and best known (not always the same) programmers and had leading billing and rated radio stations; so did they. Picasso did not paint like Rembrand or Monet, and Dickens did not write like James Joyce or Franz Kafka. None of those folks wrote or painted badly; they just did it differently from each other. Different strokes, ya' know.
And I thought that, in post #70 of this thread, that I had responded to your points.
Your approach works in Buffalo, Buddy. That... and the fact that you make radio "work" in 2025 is pretty awesome, dude!
But I don't agree with some of your points, such as "young people becoming tired of the internet". A few may be tired of letting others think for them, a few may find better things to do with their time and a few may not like talking to an array of CPUs doing an AI act on them. But the majority is not rejecting current technology, whether it is streaming on demand video or social media or websites like this.
I do too, @Buddy Shula and I just show up the naysayers by doing my job to the best of my ability and proving that local can still workThank you David. Sorry I get a little uptight sometimes. I just really care about our industry.
I do too, @Buddy Shula and I just show up the naysayers by doing my job to the best of my ability and proving that local can still work
The TM Stereo Rock format was introduced in the early 70s, when Top 40 stations were still called "rockers", as per your comment. The AM Top 40 where I grew up had jingles reflecting that as late as 1976 ("85, K-T-A-C, rock and roll!").
It was the rise of tightly formatted album-oriented rock (AOR) stations that killed that, because by the end of the 70s, when listeners heard the term "rock" they thought of their local AOR outlet, and many of those stations used the on-air liner "[local area's] best rock" or variants of it.
In Charlotte Broadcasting Yearbook called WBCY "AOR", but it wasn't. It may have been "Charlotte's Best Rock" but it was like a rock-leaning Top 40. WROQ called its format "adult rock" (at least in Broadcasting Yearbook) but it was an AOR. The two stations probably should have swapped those terms. WBCY was more adult sounding.
Radio has no reason to restrict itself to towers and transmitters. There's no law preventing radio from televising it's shows on the internet. No law preventing radio stations from streaming. No law that prevents radio talent from doing podcasts. The only thing standing in the way is a boomer mentality that says we have to keep doing what we always did. That's horse & buggy thinking.
I say this all the time: There is no format radio could create, no amount of talent that radio can hire, no amount of PR radio can do that will change the fact that over 90% of the public uses their phone as their primary communications device. The radio isn't the device of choice, and radio companies don't have to tie themselves and their future to a declining device.
Case in point, A: The only streams that show up in the Nielsens are those that are simulcasts of an AM/FM in the market. None of the national streams get even a 0.1 share, anywhere.
You don't need to change the fact, you just need to migrate over to the platform the audience is using. Same programming, same local advertisers.