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View Full Version : Radio : THE BIGGER THEY ARE, THE HARDER THEY FALL



guitarzforever
February 1st, 2009, 11:33 AM
THE BIGGER THEY ARE, THE HARDER THEY FALL :bravo:

by: Randy Adams

Hollywood, Ca U.S.A. - If you're in radio, you know that this industry has been going through very rough times lately.

And, unless you've been hiding under a rock, you know that Clear Channel purchased almost half of the radio stations, from a total of 14,000 in the U.S., in a frenzy in the 1990's. They then homogenized radio to make most of their stations sound cookie-cutter and we saw the first wave of talent go by the wayside.

Today, Clear Channel announced yet more layoffs and what they call "restructuring". It's duly noted that they're doing this on a day most all of the media attention will be on the inauguration of our new president. The official press release from their CEO states about 9 percent, or just over 1,800 people, were given pink slips.

In Clear Channel's case, it isn't the economy's fault that this is happening. They set the table perfectly for complete collapse and failure.

And most other corporate radio groups are going through similar, though not as deep, cutbacks. Many of these stations were purchased by CC with huge debt. It certainly isn't a buyer's market today.....profit margins were slim in the good years. A corporate group here in our hometown, our competition, is moving to a smaller building from a location they've been in for well over 10 years, apparently to cut costs.

They took the "local" out of local radio. Soon, you'll see one programmer for each "region" and puppets will add the music they are told to add at the local level. Personality radio will be replaced by disc jockeys reading cue cards....if there are disc jockeys at all. Corporate radio groups have made it difficult for stations like ours- independent and locally owned- because to make payroll at the end of each month, they have "fire sales" and go off the deep end, slashing their prices by more than half. We think our product speaks for itself. We do a great job for our clients and serve them well. We own our building....our overhead is much less than what most stations across the country have each month.

We didn't get to this point by selling 5 stations for the price of one or having on-air radio auctions. We got here by smart, fundamental business practices and what some would consider "old school" radio.....with local personalities talking about local events. We encourage our employees to spend money when they can with our advertisers.

I'm lucky as are others in this building.....anybody that is working for an independent group such as ours (not a chain of stations region-wide or nationwide) that we are in a position to weather the storm that is certain to brew economically in 2009.

It's also time for locally owned stations and groups to shine. See, the "centralized" programming of radio stations is now only going to become more apparent than ever. Any local control any Clear Channel PD may have had is most likely not going to be there anymore. And don't fool yourself. Several trades now say Citadel is next with the chopping block.

Today, hundreds of people who have done nothing but radio as a career will be out on the streets, wondering what to do next, because of greed and poor planning. In the end, the on-air product for many radio stations will suffer.

Radio, as we've come to know if for as long as I've been in the industry, is dead Not completely, but major changes will be apparent soon for a listener. I'm not saying we're immune....everybody, including myself is expendable.....but so far, we're far away from life support machines.

http://www.boosweet.com (http://www.boosweet.com)

R_of_G
February 1st, 2009, 12:10 PM
Clear Channel and Infinity can't collapse fast enough for me. I have nothing but disdain for those companies. Radio used to mean something. Now it's a joke and I never listen to it outside of NPR. There was a time I never had to worry about having music in the car to listen to because I had New York classic rock radio and some great NJ college rock/punk stations to listen to. Now I have to make sure I have my iPod in the car with me at all times because radio is a wasteland of Clear Channel clone stations. I hope they go broke in a hurry.

mcgreggor57
February 1st, 2009, 04:43 PM
Being in the business, I can only say I appreciate our company and the decisions we've had to make the weather these tough times.

Gil Janus
February 1st, 2009, 05:11 PM
Living in Vermont I don't have to put up with CC - they own only 1 station in the state - down in Rutland. CBS Radio (Infinity) doesn't have a place here either.

Not that some of the stations we do have are any better. iPods and even CDs gets lots of use in our cars. Driving in hilly Central and Northeast Vermont, you do loose stations due to the terrain. That's life :)

Gil :cool:

Spudman
February 1st, 2009, 07:23 PM
I would love to see all of radio get restructured.
I find little joy that play lists are not adjustable by the DJs any more. I worked at a station in high school and it was great. The jocks turned me on to a lot of music that I'd never heard before. They got to bring in their own albums and play what they wanted. That doesn't happen on radio any more. Maybe restructuring radio could help new artists (real artists) get the exposure we all need to escape the corporate music doldrums.

R_of_G
February 2nd, 2009, 08:19 AM
I find little joy that play lists are not adjustable by the DJs any more. I worked at a station in high school and it was great. The jocks turned me on to a lot of music that I'd never heard before. Thy got to bring in their own albums and play what they wanted. That doesn't happen on radio any more. Maybe restructuring radio could help new artists (real artists) get the exposure we all need to escape the corporate music doldrums.

Probably the most salient point of all. Radio used to be about individual personalities exposing their audiences to the music they loved. It actually used to matter what time of day you listened to a station because different DJ's played different things. Now they are just reading info off of a corporate-controlled playlist.

Andy
February 3rd, 2009, 02:21 PM
classic rock stations are nothing more than an advertising medium, they have been that way for some time now, the music is just for filler.

the only thing positive about the pre-programmed stations is that you don't have to listen to a lame disk jockey between the journey and bob seeger songs....