Signpost said:Kiss 108 is a troubling example. Since cutting to all but the two remaining live shifts - ratings have soared to a record #1 run 12+. What's the incentive for them to add live jocks? Only with local (disciplined) competition could Kiss 108's rampant voicetracking become a liability.
CTListener said:.....Today's radio listener wants as little yackity-yack as possible and really doesn't give a crap about local news; just play the tunes and shut up.....
live and local on college radio like our WMWM blues show
beantownradio25 said:It's 2010, radio will never be the way it was in the old days again! Anyone who comes on this board and says "R.I.P Real Radio" is stuck in the past and isn't looking at things from a business perspective. .....
Schuyler said:It's one thing to be nostalgic for a time when things were far and away better on all sorts of levels, including revenue. It's another to try to justify staying in the business even if it means wallowing in its present crapulence and trying desperately to justify its deplorable state.
I'd rather be stuck in the past than in the present, you miserable whippersnapper. Now get off my lawn!.
CTListener said:radio has to be as iPod-like as possible.
12 In a Row said:Makes me laugh seeing some of the "back in the day" comments.
Back in the 60's the most powerful successful music stations had VERY tight playlists and the jocks were highly restricted. Light, tight, bright-shut up and play the music. Result? Huge ratings.
aaronread said:I wonder how many college radio stations could get their asses nailed to the wall for all the unpaid free labor they get from non-student DJ's and whatnot? No really, I honestly wonder about that! I have no idea if minimum-wage laws apply in this case. I'd assume they do unless told otherwise but I haven't really looked into it...and I confess I don't like the idea that all the time I volunteered at various stations might've indirectly been causing them to break the law.
Schuyler said:CTListener said:.....Today's radio listener wants as little yackity-yack as possible and really doesn't give a crap about local news; just play the tunes and shut up.....
Beancounters have made that claim ever since automation systems came into being (the big clunky kind with reel-to-reel tapes and cart carousels). Indeed, there are many listeners who feel the way you describe, but they are not now nor ever have been the total population.
OTOH, it doesn't matter. As long is radio is treated like any other business instead of like the news-and-entertainment business, voicetracking and every other half-a$$ed way of saving or making a buck will prevail.
R.I.P. Real Radio