hipporadio said:
Yes he’s back... D.E. has found this thread and given-reason to professionally-minimize the likes of even WLNG—“LONG” established as a “conversation piece” in the broader radio industry. I know – LOTS talk about this station, yet probably wouldn’t listen IF they lived within sight of the “Tall Tower”! But, simply put: This is a VERY FINE smaller-market station – operated by LOCAL OWNERSHIP since 1963, for a profit [imagine that] - and for TWENTY-FIVE YEARS attracting notice from their peers. NO [SORRY], it’s NOT because they’re in the Hamptons – it’s because they are an EXCEPTIONAL radio station - irregardless of their proximity to NYC, replication of former legendary formats there, and a 60dbu that covers the home of Stephen Spielberg.
To say WLNG is exceptional denigrates hundreds if not thousands of "equally exceptional" stations in Ludington, MI or Sydney, MT or Lake City, FL or Prescott, AZ or Powell, WY, that don't cover the $100,000,000 home of a movie producer. Paul Sidney and I were both members for at least a decade of the International Broadcasgters Idea Bank, and I can say that WLNG was defintiely a good station, but so were those of the other 99 members. Nobody annointed WLNG with holy oil.
I’ll bet their revenue is a bit “north” of “a mil”
This year it is probably going to be about $1.2 million. The LI market in general is very soft, so I am assuming zero growth for WLNG based on the '06 figure. Coming from a market where individual talents, GMs, PDs make that much in salary, this seems like a tiny amount to me.
[/quote]He also casually-alludes to NorthWest MONTANA... I'VE BEEN THEREMANY TIMES - There IS NO WLNG in that locale![/quote]
No, there may not be a WLNG because WLNG is uniquely Sag Harbor. But there are equivalents all over the US in similar small markets.
This is yet another example of SHAMELESS and SELF-PROMOTING corporate radio apology from its ultimate [10,000-post] POSTER-CHILD on this board... I’m really past LAUGHING at this crap! D.E. is the very reason we lament the bygone days and a better era in radio broadcasting... He IS their “Lap-Lab” and ultimate “apologist”... Certainly you mindfull folks have recognized that! D.E. - WHEN will you cease the excuses for what your industry has become [which is a shell of what it once WAS] and focus on your way out of this mess?
What a load of crap to defend you position, which seems only to be to take jabs at me. Listen again, con brio, to what I said: "To say WLNG is unique is to denigrate the many fine smaller market stations all across the US that serve their markets as well or, in some cases, better than WLNG.
This is a tirade, I understand, and I apologize... I am “former radio”... The field I now draw a check from is one that contributes to D.E.’s sacred “budgets”... Do you know [D.E.] that “our faith in you is failing, son?” You have “kissed goodbye” your most loyal demo... You have managed the accolade of maneuvering the position of entertaining the FIRST youth demo since Fibber McGee & Mollie that DOESN’T relate to radio in their youth... Your entire “house of cards” is leveraged on an over-competed-for cadre of 40-year-olds that have grown tired of you McFormats and headed off to SAT, CDs, and even the [formerly] youthful iPod! And you come 10,000 times to this forum to criticize any form of concern or “art” – let alone the likes of small-market-iconic WLNG... I’m getting sick!
I know, the end is near, repent, whatever.
Fact: 95% of all 12+ persons use radio weekly, only about a percent different than the first Arbitron books 40 years ago. And there are many alternatives for entertainment, so the amount of time spent with each is obviously going to fragment all types of entertainment. But the younger 18-34 demo is fine, thank you. Off a little in TSL, yes. But when I was 18 we had no local TV station, no cable, no VHS, no Walkman CF player, no PS2 or Wii or iPod or DVD player. No TiVo, no satellite tv, no satellite radio. Just the 42 local AM fulltimers... so we fought with each other (often literally... I had to have a bodyguard) instead of alternative media. But radio can be viable for decades, maybe more.
The average listener age at the 70 stations I work with is around 33 or 34. And we reach around 15 million listeners a week. What does that tell you about younger people and radio.
Quit awfulizing about radio. There is much to be proud of, but it is not the kind of radio we did 20 or 30 or 40 years ago. Thank goodness.
Do what you will... But leave WLNG alone!
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