I heard that Bill Steadman was back in the chair at WMXJ. True dat?
SportsDotCom said:Hasn't Dennis Collins been there for about 30 years? He's run a very successful cluster. You must have an axe to grind sir.
So... what's your idea?samb15 said:B92 says,
Now let's get bold and local -- I'm actually in discussions with a couple of local broadcasters about this and hoping to bring something fresh. We'll see what develops...
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B92 said:Mike's comment about the Wolfman really drew a chuckle. Of course, 73-74 was about the time of the mnovie, American Graffiti, and if you recall, in the movie, the kids tried to speak to the Wolfman at the studio and all they found was poor Bob Smith and the "tapes." What a letdown after all those years of putting your radio folk on a pedestal and then meeting them at a small station with poor equipment or seeing what they look like in person. I think that was part of the memory that was being conveyed in the movie because, of course, in those days, radio jocks were bigger than life.
RE: John Jax & Jacksonville
I remember Jacksonville market as a lot of fun, at one time. The Greaseman at 690/WAPE and a solid lineup of quality air talent back in their rock n' roll days in te late 70s and early 1980s. The "Chucker" Charles
Einstein Brittain who later worked at WLS doing mornings at I-100, WIVY. The Big WAIV with "Downtown" Hank Brown. While the Greaseman (like him or hate him) was big-time and bigger than the market,
Jacksonville had quality medium market air personalities putting out an enthusiastic product. Great radio news guys who you might hear on the networks now in New York like John Collins read the top of hour
5-minute updates. Y-100's old morning guy, Mitchell in the Morning succeeded "the Chucker" down there before coming to Miami and later leaving Miami for Dallas and doing country. Jacksonville was a really
cool little radio market back then. I recall that Greaseman did 6-years in Jacksonville and it took the owner, a guy named Kaplan, to empty his wallet and pay him a staggering $600,000 a year to keep him there
near the end until Washington, DC. called and eventually priced him out of town. WAPE, at the end, had switched to country and Greaseman was hysterical even doing the country. Did I mention the BIG WAIV?
Some good guys there, too. About 2-years ago, I remember visiting Jacksonville and hearing Cool 96.9 which was cookie cutter, but, sounded okay. They were apparently live at night because I heard the
guy taking requests and phones. On my last visit, the market sounded like it was dead. Cool 96.9 was gone and I zipped across the FM band and it really didn't sound like a medium market anymore which is
really ashamed. I also remember hearing Robbie Rose on the air on one of the FM stations which brought a chuckle. Robbie Rose was just a no-name traffic guy with a heavy southern accent that became famous as being part of the Greaseman show where Grease interacted and elevated everyone around him to be part of the show. Hearing him on an FM station, more than 20-years later, was quite funny. I, also, recognized the voice of one of the part-timers on Cool 96.9 as another guy that Grease used to talk to on his show. But, overrall, what a letdown to hear what has happened to that market.
There is no real comparison of (a) Jacksonville to (a) Miami. As pointed out, Jacksonville is a top50 and Miami is just outside the top 10 in the lower teens. So, certainly there is and was more choice in Miami
and Miami also deserves a lot more tough critical review when you consider the revenue stream in the market as compared to a top 50 market. Nobody is losing money with a decent signal in Miami and if they
are, then, they don't know how to run their station or cluster. It's one thing to downsize, but, when you have some small market radio stations that sound better and more enthusiastic and in touch than some
major market radio stations, it is a disgrace. The product in some major and medium markets is shameful. You have working stiff foot soldiers with medium level talent and a lot of enthusiasm and passion working
for working stiff salaries that put out a better product than some of the giants do in places like Miami. HEY! Another name came to me. Hager in the Morning at the Big WAIV. Hager had the unenviable task of
competing with Greaseman in the morning and the 2-stations, WAPE and WAIV on AM band used to go at it in a radio war and that was still going on in the early 1980s. Those were fun stations.
Where is the Chucker? Charles Einstein Brittain today? Last I heard him, he was doing overnights at WLS, but, that was an eternity ago before they went talk. He was a great jock. Without turning this into
some nostalgia thing, the point of bringing all this up should serve also as a reminder to what made radio great and what is missing today in Miami. As changed as radio is, you can point to morning drive in
Jacksonville, during that period. Kids and parents getting up to go to school and work could tune in an FM station and hear The Chucker or later, Mitchell in the Morning. Greaseman and Hager on AM stations and people could go to work at the water cooler and they'd remember something somebody said, as well as, getting all the info they needed. Was it Top 10 market quality? No, but, it didn't have to be. Even today,
you do find that in most major markets; a must-listen morning show. In slamming Miami as a pathetic "major" market, the point was that there is just nothing like that here. Not one mass appeal morning show coming out of Miami or afternoon show. Y-100 is gone running Elvis out of NY. Hot 105 runs Tom Joyner. You have this big major market and all these morning shows and none seems to be able to stretch beyond their own little format niche. In many markets, you'll have one or two local personalities that dominate mornings and pull in an audience beyond the limitations of their station's niche format. In New York, Stern used to grab 7-10 shares and then at 10am, the station would dip back to 4-something. WIOD runs Schnitt out of Tampa. Again, in a market this size, there should be a local morning show with appeal that is in touch with the pulse of the market. You just don't have that here in talk or morning drive or music or in any form. During the election cycle, I recall CNN trying to capture the pulse of different cities. They'd try to interview a particular radio guy from a city. They'd find a local host to talk to in smaller towns like Kansas City or Denver or Des Moines, but, in Miami, there was nobody to talk to. They asked Neil Rogers and he declined to be interviewed and they couldn't come up with a replacement. There just wasn't anybody qualified to be a radio spokesperson in touch with the city and listeners here. There's nobody talking about the community or local events at all in any meaningful way having an impact. There's no local morning guy to pull a promotional stunt to get everyone's attention like standing out in the cold for 24-hours in a bathing suit on 95 or some ridiculous thing. Tom Joyner certainly isn't going to do it. Elvis Duran isn't doing it from New York. Schnitt isn't commuting to Miami to appear at some shopping mall to solicit blood donations. Glenn Beck isn't
going to talk about school closings and possible teachers strking over pay and budget cuts in Miami. Again, this is not a nostalgia thing about local and live radio; this is part of what is wrong with this Miami
market in 2009. With all the changes in radio, other markets, bigger and smaller than Miami, still have some local presence. Just look around the country and with all the syndicated programming and voicetracking,
most cities, bigger and smaller, still somehow have at least one strong and solid local talk show host/program and at least one strong and solid local morning show on a music station that reaches an audience
that goes beyond the limitations of his own station's format. Some kind of go-to-show for mornings in that city and this is why Miami/Fort Lauderdale ranks as one of the most disappointing major market radio towns.
As long as radio is being run by clueless suits and beancounters, Miami radio will continue to suck. One simple way to fix this, just DO NOT listen to and support these syndicated programs. When the suits finally realize that nobody is listening and there is low billing, that will force them to do something.B92 said:Mike's comment about the Wolfman really drew a chuckle. Of course, 73-74 was about the time of the mnovie, American Graffiti, and if you recall, in the movie, the kids tried to speak to the Wolfman at the studio and all they found was poor Bob Smith and the "tapes." What a letdown after all those years of putting your radio folk on a pedestal and then meeting them at a small station with poor equipment or seeing what they look like in person. I think that was part of the memory that was being conveyed in the movie because, of course, in those days, radio jocks were bigger than life.
RE: John Jax & Jacksonville
I remember Jacksonville market as a lot of fun, at one time. The Greaseman at 690/WAPE and a solid lineup of quality air talent back in their rock n' roll days in te late 70s and early 1980s. The "Chucker" Charles
Einstein Brittain who later worked at WLS doing mornings at I-100, WIVY. The Big WAIV with "Downtown" Hank Brown. While the Greaseman (like him or hate him) was big-time and bigger than the market,
Jacksonville had quality medium market air personalities putting out an enthusiastic product. Great radio news guys who you might hear on the networks now in New York like John Collins read the top of hour
5-minute updates. Y-100's old morning guy, Mitchell in the Morning succeeded "the Chucker" down there before coming to Miami and later leaving Miami for Dallas and doing country. Jacksonville was a really
cool little radio market back then. I recall that Greaseman did 6-years in Jacksonville and it took the owner, a guy named Kaplan, to empty his wallet and pay him a staggering $600,000 a year to keep him there
near the end until Washington, DC. called and eventually priced him out of town. WAPE, at the end, had switched to country and Greaseman was hysterical even doing the country. Did I mention the BIG WAIV?
Some good guys there, too. About 2-years ago, I remember visiting Jacksonville and hearing Cool 96.9 which was cookie cutter, but, sounded okay. They were apparently live at night because I heard the
guy taking requests and phones. On my last visit, the market sounded like it was dead. Cool 96.9 was gone and I zipped across the FM band and it really didn't sound like a medium market anymore which is
really ashamed. I also remember hearing Robbie Rose on the air on one of the FM stations which brought a chuckle. Robbie Rose was just a no-name traffic guy with a heavy southern accent that became famous as being part of the Greaseman show where Grease interacted and elevated everyone around him to be part of the show. Hearing him on an FM station, more than 20-years later, was quite funny. I, also, recognized the voice of one of the part-timers on Cool 96.9 as another guy that Grease used to talk to on his show. But, overrall, what a letdown to hear what has happened to that market.
There is no real comparison of (a) Jacksonville to (a) Miami. As pointed out, Jacksonville is a top50 and Miami is just outside the top 10 in the lower teens. So, certainly there is and was more choice in Miami
and Miami also deserves a lot more tough critical review when you consider the revenue stream in the market as compared to a top 50 market. Nobody is losing money with a decent signal in Miami and if they
are, then, they don't know how to run their station or cluster. It's one thing to downsize, but, when you have some small market radio stations that sound better and more enthusiastic and in touch than some
major market radio stations, it is a disgrace. The product in some major and medium markets is shameful. You have working stiff foot soldiers with medium level talent and a lot of enthusiasm and passion working
for working stiff salaries that put out a better product than some of the giants do in places like Miami. HEY! Another name came to me. Hager in the Morning at the Big WAIV. Hager had the unenviable task of
competing with Greaseman in the morning and the 2-stations, WAPE and WAIV on AM band used to go at it in a radio war and that was still going on in the early 1980s. Those were fun stations.
Where is the Chucker? Charles Einstein Brittain today? Last I heard him, he was doing overnights at WLS, but, that was an eternity ago before they went talk. He was a great jock. Without turning this into
some nostalgia thing, the point of bringing all this up should serve also as a reminder to what made radio great and what is missing today in Miami. As changed as radio is, you can point to morning drive in
Jacksonville, during that period. Kids and parents getting up to go to school and work could tune in an FM station and hear The Chucker or later, Mitchell in the Morning. Greaseman and Hager on AM stations and people could go to work at the water cooler and they'd remember something somebody said, as well as, getting all the info they needed. Was it Top 10 market quality? No, but, it didn't have to be. Even today,
you do find that in most major markets; a must-listen morning show. In slamming Miami as a pathetic "major" market, the point was that there is just nothing like that here. Not one mass appeal morning show coming out of Miami or afternoon show. Y-100 is gone running Elvis out of NY. Hot 105 runs Tom Joyner. You have this big major market and all these morning shows and none seems to be able to stretch beyond their own little format niche. In many markets, you'll have one or two local personalities that dominate mornings and pull in an audience beyond the limitations of their station's niche format. In New York, Stern used to grab 7-10 shares and then at 10am, the station would dip back to 4-something. WIOD runs Schnitt out of Tampa. Again, in a market this size, there should be a local morning show with appeal that is in touch with the pulse of the market. You just don't have that here in talk or morning drive or music or in any form. During the election cycle, I recall CNN trying to capture the pulse of different cities. They'd try to interview a particular radio guy from a city. They'd find a local host to talk to in smaller towns like Kansas City or Denver or Des Moines, but, in Miami, there was nobody to talk to. They asked Neil Rogers and he declined to be interviewed and they couldn't come up with a replacement. There just wasn't anybody qualified to be a radio spokesperson in touch with the city and listeners here. There's nobody talking about the community or local events at all in any meaningful way having an impact. There's no local morning guy to pull a promotional stunt to get everyone's attention like standing out in the cold for 24-hours in a bathing suit on 95 or some ridiculous thing. Tom Joyner certainly isn't going to do it. Elvis Duran isn't doing it from New York. Schnitt isn't commuting to Miami to appear at some shopping mall to solicit blood donations. Glenn Beck isn't
going to talk about school closings and possible teachers strking over pay and budget cuts in Miami. Again, this is not a nostalgia thing about local and live radio; this is part of what is wrong with this Miami
market in 2009. With all the changes in radio, other markets, bigger and smaller than Miami, still have some local presence. Just look around the country and with all the syndicated programming and voicetracking,
most cities, bigger and smaller, still somehow have at least one strong and solid local talk show host/program and at least one strong and solid local morning show on a music station that reaches an audience
that goes beyond the limitations of his own station's format. Some kind of go-to-show for mornings in that city and this is why Miami/Fort Lauderdale ranks as one of the most disappointing major market radio towns.