Posted at 02:04 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In Flint for today then I am skating home to New York Mills tomorrow.
Its odd to be home, and not for the cliched reasons you probably think.The prevailing wisdom is that Flint is a dying city, its unpleasant to look at and the residents are bereft of hope.
These things are all very true.. and its sad to see it. The thermometer got to 91 yesterday, shedding a lot of harsh sunlight on the urban blight that has gripped this city since the 80s. The vegetation is overgrown in the urban areas which helps. The trees and grass are almost doing the buildings a solid, struggling to cover up their blemishes.
My heart breaks for the place I called home for so many decades. I disagree with my girlfriend when she says its gotten worse. I think it got a lot worse over the winter, and the sunlight is exposing it.
One of the jobs that I am interviewing for in DC next week is a grassroots campaign movement to bring "green collar" jobs to places like Flint MI. Coming here this week has given me a reminder why that cause is so important.
Posted at 08:37 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
So it looks as tho I am going to be spending the next month on the road. I am going to see family and friends back in Michigan this week. I am going to be in Flint on Wednesday night, and return to New York Mills on Friday. Its going to be odd to see Flint again, considering all that's happened to me in the past 60 days.
After that, I am heading to Washington DC. I have a VERY exciting job interview there. Regardless of whether I get it or not, I am moving to DC. Its always been a dream of mine to live there, and this moving around to different small markets is not what its cracked up to be. If I am retired from radio, so be it. The problem with living in small areas is that when you get fired you have no options. Its work at Kmart or McDonald's. At least in DC I can explore other avenues and get my foot in the door in places that otherwise I wouldn't be able to.
It's drastic. But its also exciting, I cannot wait to see what life has in store for me.
Posted at 10:13 AM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
I thought I would post this here so that everybody could hear my side of it.
Earlier today, I was fired from WSKS/WSKU here in Utica.
This draws to a close what has to be the biggest mistake I have ever made in my life. I am not going to take this opportunity to talk about what happened at Roser Communications. They have been fair, offering me a severance package that I accepted. This doesn't mitigate the fact that my life has been completely ruined. I was happily working at Citadel Broadcasting in Michigan only a little over a month ago, building a client base and slowly seguing into having a life again.
I moved to Utica with the highest expectations. I wanted to start a life here, and to build a #1 show. The reality has fallen very far short.
I am not going to take this opportunity to address the "change the format" stunt either. It was not my idea, and I regret not fighting it. I will leave it at that.
Radio is a notoriously fickle business, but being fired after only a month is unprecedented. Usually a radio show is given at least a book (6 months) before the plug is pulled. Even in the toughest of markets you get a year.
I walk away knowing this: I did everything that was asked of me. I never defrauded them, my demos sounded exactly like the show did. I went in every day and worked really hard to do a good radio show.
Sometimes these things just happen, but its the first time its happened to me.
I am currently seeking my next opportunity, email me at eric99@me.com. That's my new email addy. I regret signing up for mobileme yesterday, seeing as how today has played out. FML
**UPDATE** My landlord has been a certified SAINT and is not holding me to a lease. He is the greatest guy ever and I highly recommend that if you are in the Utica area and are considering getting a place, do it here. This is the link to the website about the townhouse. Please give it a look.
Posted at 03:41 PM in Radio Industry | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
I intentionally did not update this site for a week so everyone who got linked over from Radio-Info had a chance to read my blog. The response has been nothing short of phenomenal. I have been contacted by people who I really respect, and people whom I have never met. I have also had comments posted by exactly the people who are rooting for radio's downfall, and its exactly who we think it is.
Radio is an industry that is boundlessly fun to work in. If you are good at radio, it will afford you opportunities that you would never have otherwise. I have stood onstage in front of thousands of people with a microphone, I have laughed until my sides hurt in a studio, broadcast from the Superbowl, signed baseballs at the MLB All Star Game, and countless other "I will never forget" moments and that is all because I am damn good at being on the radio. If you are not good at radio, you can get my coffee and watch me enjoy all these moments.
These people have always been the same. The board ops. The surly interns. The guys that have the 4 day beard, acne and an attitude. They got into radio because they wanted the spotlight so they could lose that pesky virginity and maybe drown out ghostly echoes of the ridicule they received in high school for working in the A/V dept. I personally understand where these guys are coming from, but the difference is that I am good at radio and they are not. So I had a very much different experience than they did. Yes, I am out of work, but I feel like the business did well by me and I still have an unquenchable passion for it. These guys want to burn the house down because they didn't live in it, and the internet has given them newfound voice because they can post anonymously.
So when I wrote my mostly upbeat, positive note about radio as a media, this was setting up the proverbial bright white light for the dumb little moths to come bump into. My post was largely about how radio as a media isn't dead, regardless of our state of affairs. Even the most staunch supporter of consolidation would probably agree that it didn't go well, and these companies are too large to turn a profit. I didn't really argue the business model because I think that is a settled point.
So out come the idiots. These guys of course have never met optimism that they didn't dismiss or nuance that didn't confuse.
First up is Nick. He commented a bunch of things early last week, and I deleted them. It was pure drivel from someone who clearly has never even been in a programming meeting and doesnt even know how Arbitron measures ratings. If you know nothing about radio, I don't respect your opinion. He wrote back yesterday:
Yep. Not going to post them, because I know that makes you mad. Ha ha.
I will however, debate Alan Zarek:
AN IPOD IS NOT A FORM OF MEDIA, STUPID!!! Its a device. Pizza Hut doesn't compete against ovens! When the iPod first launched, they were sent to every radio station in the country. My PD and MD had no idea how to use it, so they gave it to me and I loved it. Radio is filled with old men that don't understand that iPod technology only helps radio. The phenomena called "iPod fatigue" is real and something that Apple is fighting to the point where they are slowly phasing out of iPods, focusing on phones (which I also have and love) and the games functions of the touch (which also recieves email). The problem with people like Allen and a lot of people in radio, is they have no idea how to use this new technology. They just have an arousal of a fear lobe and yell "iPod" and act like its the death of radio.
But it isn't a proven advertising media. You can download software that blocks their ads. Cable systems provide a free service to fast forward through their commercials. The only one that gives you the most impact is radio. Ads on the internet get lost in the shuffle, but not on radio. Besides, there are plenty of people who are listening to their free radio web stream WHILE they look at Drudge. Until 2007, Drudge had... a radio show. If that show would have gotten any traction, he would still be there. But alas. you have to attract a dramatically larger audience on the radio than you do on the internet.
Good. Get out because you can't hack it. You are part of the problem and not part of the solution. In fact, quit now because I want your job. I want to work on the East coast, and your position is the perfect platform to jump off from. Go announce your two weeks and send me an email. Works for both of us, you want out and I want back in. Its people like you who have jobs and gripe about it that I absolutely hate. I'll be happy not to work with you.
Our industry is thriving because radio listeners went up in 2008. People are deciding whether or not they want to keep paying for cable or newspaper, they continue to listen to radio. This idiot doesn't even understand what I wrote in the first place.
I got one criticism that I thought was pretty sage, tho. I am not sure if he wants me to name check him, but I will say he is a big name programmer from NYC. He writes:
Yes. That is the problem. What we do need to carefully consider the product that we are putting on the air, because status quo is they don't like it. We can turn that around instantly with better programming but...
Posted at 11:10 AM in Radio Industry | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
I am really disgusted by the radio industry's latest bout of self loathing. I will never understand why there are so many in our industry that think we are on the brink of collapse, regardless of the fact that the amount of radio listening has never decreased. I have been in radio for 12 years now, and every single one of those years I have heard the latest expert reading radio's last rites. But since the latest economic downturn, it seems that those in the actual industry have started to believe them! Layoffs have gone into the double digits, slashing long lists of sales and programming. Every trade publication and consultant firm has created special web pages, erecting walls to the fallen. Its not just those who are under performing. Its people who have large ratings and bring in buckets of revenue. Radio companies just slash without any consideration for the quality of the product, insane with panic because the industry will never be the same.
Stop it! Are you people serious? The most puzzling thing about the radio industry in general is its own insecurities. The people who are in radio seem convinced that we are the "other" media. We aren't as solvent as television or print, that we are on the brink of collapse at any time. Have any of these people actually done some research? Study after study shows that Americans consume more radio than ever before. Of course the faces on television and print belittle the radio industry, they have motive to! They are competing for the same advertising dollars that we are! Yet when President Obama identified his voice of opposition, was it a blogger, columnist, or pundit? Nope, Rush Limbaugh because he is the biggest name in conservative media. He arguably created conservative media, but we set that aside. Has this industry been going out of its way to create the next Rush who created a format that didn't exist before he started? Of course not. Part of radio self loathing is as soon as a star is born, we think there can never be another. So we slash, eliminating the up and comers to make sure there will be no more profitable stars.
Radio is a media unlike the others. Its the only one that is completely one dimensional, and the easiest to consume. Radio doesn't ask you to stop what you are doing, commanding your full attention and patience. Radio can be with you when you drive around, do housework, play video games or exercise and its the only media that can do all of that. Radio is designed to be enjoyed however you like, and however much commitment you give it is how much enjoyment you get out of it. If you leave a station on in the background, you will have noise to distract you. If you wear headphones, you will hear a produced quarter hour of carefully selected music that a professional stressed hours over. If they did it right, the mix will give you a better experience than any random internet stream will give you. If you are listening to a talk show, you can also leave it on for noise, but you can also get up to twenty minutes of free wheeling discussion that will either make you laugh, think or make you angry. No other media at all gives you twenty commercial free minutes of entertainment, and there are thousands of radio stations that are doing it right now 24 hours a day with absolutely no cost to the listener.
Yes, ad revenue is down. Of course it is, we are in a recession. But we still have a huge audience that we can give to our advertisers. Now is the time to cultivate relationships with advertisers and we can't do that when we are radically changing the product that we are selling. Remember, its not the 60 second spots we are selling, its the airtime. Radically changing the product does not help at all in getting revenue up.
But yet we slash. We try to figure out how to cut corners, assuming that the industry will never be the same. Network TV numbers are way down, so they are cutting costs. Newspapers are cutting like crazy, because less people read newspapers. The number of radio listeners actually went up in 2008, but..
Why are we looking to other media whose numbers are declining for leadership? Why don't we point out that you must pay for digital TV boxes, you must subscribe to cable, you need a subscription or a website account to view periodicals. Why can't we point out that we are the industry that thrived during the real great depression, and we have the audience that has never gone away. Why don't we point out that the rise of the Internet actually adds to radio, because it the one media that you can enjoy at the same time as surfing the web? We don't point that out, we just slash. We assume that if television and newspapers are doing it, we should too. These are the same outlets that excoriate our business, calling us "shock talk" and look down their noses at us. They shame us, call us names, put labels on us, have less of an audience than we do, compete for the same advertising dollars that we do, and yet we follow their lead.
Don't you see that now is the time to act? Our industry is not hurting, it is thriving. The Internet has given us the one thing we never had: a visual element. We can take this one dimensional media and our listeners can enhance their experience if they choose to. Plus, we can save huge amounts of money on promotions cost by using free Web 2.0 services like Facebook, Twitter and Plurk. We can reach listeners now and remind them to listen in ways we never had before, and we think this industry is in trouble?
But still we slash. We devalue how important we are to the audience. We forget that our industry is still a dominant media, and people on TV have every reason to say we are less than that. Yet still we slash, as if the radio side of the economic downturn will never end, regardless of the fact that the audience still wants and needs us. The death of radio? As with the most tragic cases of self loathing, we're committing suicide.
Posted at 02:30 PM in Radio Industry | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
Chuck Taylor has written an article for R&R that as enjoyable to read as dragging a serrated blade between your toes this weekend. Its called Career 2.0. I suppose its for people who are considering leaving the radio industry and need to be reassured that their years spent in the business were completely in vain. My favorite:
Leave it to radio trade publications to cite as experts a website that makes its money on job turnover, rather than trusting ourselves in the industry that WE WORK IN. Lets just ignore that satellite radio is on the brink of bankruptcy without ever turning a profit. Lets also ignore the industry secret that syndicated shows are actually more expensive than local talent, and that syndicated shows (outside of political talk) have been dying off after big debuts.
Internet killed the television star, but radio marches on. Study after study shows people watching less and less TV, but daily consumption of radio has never waned. While readers of daily publications have dwindled and network prime time television has fallen off, radio actually increased listeners. The only thing that has ever faltered is the radio industry's own self confidence. iPhones have two media that you can access: internet and RADIO. Why do we feel like we are the dinosaurs rumbling toward a tar pit?
Posted at 01:16 PM in Radio Industry | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Perhaps Opie and Anthony as well. I am not one of those radio people who are excited about the impending death of Satrad. I don't think its a business that can survive without big personalities, tho. Satellite radio is going to have to evolve, just like the rest of the business, or die. But if you just stream music, they don't have a prayer.
Radio companies need to understand that you will be insolvent unless you have personalities that can deliver your message. Seeing as how most GMs are sales managers anyway, look at it like this: You must have the best possible person getting your message out there, or its not going to work. Just having someone on the air is not enough to get people's attention. Radio is not like bilboards. It must be sought out before people can listen to the advertising.
Posted at 10:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
No. But goddammit they are gonna try.
The tickets will be brisk, the show will be seen as a success, the industry will over react, and it will collapse into a gigantic mess.
Posted at 01:17 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Swell.
This is terrific. Out of curiosity, is there any radio people that are actually going to be running radio companies anymore? As I said in another post, this industry is doomed every time the TV people intervene. Its a different media, pure and simple.
Posted at 01:13 PM in Radio Industry | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)