elchupacabras said:Perhaps there is some truth to that. I think I was referring more to music radio.
So was I. The #1 music format in the 60s was something called MOR. Middle of the Road. Nothing more boring than that.
elchupacabras said:Perhaps there is some truth to that. I think I was referring more to music radio.
TheBigA said:elchupacabras said:Perhaps there is some truth to that. I think I was referring more to music radio.
So was I. The #1 music format in the 60s was something called MOR. Middle of the Road. Nothing more boring than that.
firepoint525 said:I personally would rather see radio stations go all satellite/automated and all that, rather than see them hire "djs," only to treat them like crap, and then still try to squeeze unpaid overtime out of them, and complain when something doesn't get done! (Yeah, this kind of stuff happens in other industries, too, but work with me here.) They can get better sounding djs out of New York or LA or wherever. A former GM told us in a staff meeting that stations go satellite because they can't find good djs locally. That isn't entirely true. They can't find good djs locally for what they are willing or able to pay for one! The satellite music services don't cost as much as the warm body in the chair. Fine, I understand that. Just don't blame the dj because you don't have the budget for one. If you can't afford live jocks, then it isn't even an issue for you. Go all automated all the time.
I was able to make the current environment work for me. I programmed five radio stations on the overnight shift for 10 years! Consolidation? Didn't scare me! All I did was babysat those transmitters! I have not been a live on-air announcer since 1996! Although I did voiceover work for the station while I was there, because I believe in going above and beyond the call of duty, and making myself useful. It was not glamorous, and I was not a "star," but I actually made more money (because I was hourly, not salaried) than I had at any of those previous stations where I had "jocked," and on top of that, had a lot LESS stress! And since I was there at night, I was able to avoid most (but not all) of the office politics, enabling me to last longer there than nearly all of my coworkers. With a few exceptions, big egos were not a problem, because we were not some huge station with "superstar" djs. And because I worked overnight, the tradeoff was that I was able to be off most weekends!
elchupacabras said:No, I think all of us realize that the days of cart racks, tone arms and transmitters with tubes are gone, just as is the model for the DJ and the 60's music format.
The sixties model was when radio was fun to do and fun to listen to. There was a personality behind the microphone who actually gave a crap about his listener. Radio is painfully boring in most cases these days, because it is nothing more than a puker with a push button, reading a liner card.
I will also take a shot at the music industry. Music for the most part sucks. Has sucked for the past 15 years or so.
Even in Spanish language radio, which you know so well, it has gone down, thanks to 30 years of payola and lackies such as Raul Velasco who promoted mediocre acts who paid for time on Azcarraga's Telerisa. That's why we went from the likes of Jose Jose and El Puma to promotion of narcocorridos. Sure, there are a few exceptions, I can think of Juanes or Arjona.
Where are the power artists in English? Where is the talent? When I see Lady GaGa I want to loose my cookies.
And as for the public? We've dumbed them down by not informing them. We've told the public they should no longer care for a 15 minute news block, even on news/talk stations. (Harvey is gone, few affiliates pick up all ten minutes of CBS's World News Roundup). Ask someone under 35 what happened in the news and the will give you a blank stare.
Who is to blame? We are. By not insisting on the old model of information, personality and music, we have accepted an inferior product that the public could care less about.
firepoint525 said:I programmed five radio stations on the overnight shift for 10 years!
DavidEduardo said:firepoint525 said:I programmed five radio stations on the overnight shift for 10 years!
Can you explain that? I have never heard of a PD that did not at least have some normal office hours... how did you work with the GM on bugets and such, with sales on promotions, etc., etc?
One AM and four shortwave stations. Two out of the four had 24-hour ministries on them. At the time I left there, they were in the process of eliminating positions so that a daytime programmer and an evening programmer could do what I was doing at night. With the forward march of technology over the 10 years I was doing overnights, if it kept up at that pace, my former position would be eliminated.DavidEduardo said:Can you explain that? I have never heard of a PD that did not at least have some normal office hours... how did you work with the GM on bugets and such, with sales on promotions, etc., etc?firepoint525 said:I programmed five radio stations on the overnight shift for 10 years!
You are essentially correct. I was definitely NOT the program director. I had no authority, only responsibility. In other words, no credit, but all the blame. I was "night manager," which included security, engineering, sanitation, production, secretarial work, concierge, information desk, voiceover work, and of course, programming. Some of that was officially my job responsibilities, and some of it was just unofficial duties that I took on while I was there.Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:David: I think we are having a "regional dialect" problem in this conversation. I have a feeling that the stations Firepoint worked for did not have a program director in the sense you are talking about. I did not understand his message to say that he performing the activities and duties you think of as "programming". Though titles were handed out in small market southern stations, the authority and responsibility did not match what the term "program the station" meant in metro markets. Firepoint can speak for himself on this issue as to what he was really doing in the middle of the night. I have my own ideas what he was probably doing.
firepoint525 said:]You are essentially correct. I was definitely NOT the program director. I had no authority, only responsibility. In other words, no credit, but all the blame. I was "night manager," which included security, engineering, sanitation, production, secretarial work, concierge, information desk, voiceover work, and of course, programming. Some of that was officially my job responsibilities, and some of it was just unofficial duties that I took on while I was there.
firepoint525 said:One AM and four shortwave stations.
elchupacabras said:Music for the most part sucks. Has sucked for the past 15 years or so. All formats. Even in Spanish language radio, which you know so well, it has gone down, thanks to 30 years of payola and lackies such as Raul Velasco who promoted mediocre acts who paid for time on Azcarraga's Telerisa. That's why we went from the likes of Jose Jose and El Puma to promotion of narcocorridos.
Bill Wolfenbarger said:(They should have known that paying 20-25 times earnings would come back to bite them in the butt).
SirRoxalot said:If "an amateur can entertain as much as a professional", then why aren't those shows hitting the top of the ratings, and why are they hosted by professionals instead of amateurs.
SirRoxalot said:It ain't as easy as it looks. If it was, everybody would be doing it.