The KeenerBlog

Random thoughts from the 60s and beyond.

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

One writer who can see the future

YOUTH REDEFINE RADIO CULTURE
By MARK McGUIRE c.2005 Albany Times Union

ALBANY, N.Y. — Michael Harrison had some free time on a recent business trip, so he made a detour to the Jersey Shore.

It was a hot, beautiful Saturday, a perfect July beach day. Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine, the most prominent trade magazine covering talk radio, listened to the surf, the gulls, the chatter of the sunbathers who packed the oceanfront.
After a while, he hit upon a stunning truth:

Harrison didn't hear a single radio.

Even a decade ago, the beach was the place to hear a cacophony of music, pouring out of everything from tiny transistor radios to suitcase-sized boomboxes. A stroll in the sand could tell you more about youth culture than most marketing studies.

But Harrison was looking at a sea of headphones, almost all of them connected to iPods and other MP3 players. "When young people no longer see radio as the center of their culture ... when young people stop doing something and it ceases to be an icon, an institution in their lives, it doesn't bode well for the future," Harrison said.

Let's be clear: Beach visions aside, traditional radio isn't yet as dead-and-buried as the eight-track.

Like the old peasant in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail," radio is wailing, "I'm not dead yet." Harrison agrees. But he emphasizes the word yet.

"Radio faces an uncertain future, but doom is not around the corner," he said. "It's just over the horizon." Increasingly, the favorite local radio frequencies of many local music fans is 107.9 FM or 88.1 FM. You don't recognize those stations? The frequencies are dead air. People use them to play iPods over the car stereos.

When listeners turn away from terrestrial radio, it's because of distressingly similar complaints. Commercial radio is suffering from a palpable loss of vitality and relevance, they lament. Music stations overplay the same hits endlessly.

Talk shows, especially of the political variety, are numbingly repetitive forums — Democrats evil, Republicans good; reverse for Air America — in which canned vitriol is passed off as edge.

Radio's sorry state comes into focus when you look at all of radio's audio competitors, from the home computer to portable MP3 players and even podcasts (although listenership to these homegrown shows has been slow to grow). Satellite companies Sirius and XM are offering hundreds of talk and music stations tailored to specific genres and topics.

Most worrisome is that this isn't merely the whining of old guys out of the target demo. Listen to the young adults — the lifeblood and advertising objective of broadcast outlets.

"They play songs over and over again," said Dave Rust, a 20-year-old State University of New York at Albany student. "They play songs to death." "Who wants to sit there and hit all the stations until you find what you like?" said Marisa Basle, 20, of Latham, N.Y.

Teens and young adults are listening to less radio this year compared to last, according to a recent study of 15- to 24-year-olds by Bridges Ratings, an audience measurement service. Meanwhile, almost seven out of 10 respondents to the Bridges study said they're spending more time listening to their MP3 player than they were six months ago; only a shade more than one in 10 said they're listening to more radio these days.

There's concern traditional radio isn't adapting to the challenges posed by the digital age and the demands of the on-demand era.

"Half of (the dilemma) has been caused by technological advancements and affordable portable technology," Harrison said, "and the other half has been the corporatization of radio. It has taken away from the excitement of diversity, that every market was so different." Deregulation led to the conglomerization and homogenization of the medium. Large companies like Clear Channel and Viacom bought up local outlets. Airwaves became filled with syndicated hosts. Playlists are short and codified across cities, so that a station in Albany, Abilene, Tampa or Tacoma all sound similar. (OK, the weather report may be different.) It seems to be an industry run by dittoheads, and not necessarily Rush Limbaugh fans.

In the past, Harrison said, "there was much more of a connection between the radio and the culture. (Now) there is a disconnect between the medium and the street." To survive, he and many others say, radio must be distinct and local, and carry the possibility of surprise.

Buzz Brindle is a radio veteran who also did a stint at MTV. He acknowledges that commercial radio has made mistakes: "It used to play it safe a lot more, and at one time it worked," he said. "It doesn't anymore." Radio still has younger fans: "I like the DJs ... (and) I like variety," said 25-year-old Jen Bilodeau of East Greenbush, N.Y. "I like to hear what's next." But Breanne Brown said she can rely on iTunes and other Web sites and services — as well as word of mouth — to keep her up to date. "I know what bands I like, and I go from there," the 20-year-old from Albany said. Radio, she said, is slowly being tuned out.

"It's too many commercials, and you don't get to hear what you want to," It's become fashionable for pundits to announce the death of any number of old-school media and formats, from the sitcom and the summer blockbuster to, um, newspapers.
Of course, media formats get "killed off" with each new technology.

Radio was going to kill newspapers, television was going to kill radio, the Internet was going to kill everything else. It doesn't happen.

Different mediums get downsized, maybe even de-emphasized, but they survive by adapting.

Radio, some fear, isn't adapting. There's still time, but the future is just over the horizon. And it promises to be anything but a walk on the beach.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

The Keener Podcast - Dream Cruise Edition

We celebrate the 2005 Woodward Dream Cruise with air checks from past broadcasts featuring Bob Green and Scott Regen and Bob Berry’s interview with Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits, a piece that never aired due to the historic black out of 2003. We highlight some of the 2004 Dream Cruise events and showcase a trunk load of music for cruising from Jan and Dean, Ronnie and the Daytonas, the Beach Boys and more.

Hear the show 35 minutes 31 MB MP3 http://www.keenerpodcast.com/keener13podcast081305.mp3

Also, look for a brief bio of Keener on Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WKNR

The folks in Cleveland posted a history of their station and I couldn't let them get all the glory.

Saturday, August 06, 2005

The Keener Podcast - Bob Baldori

Bob Baldori has to be one of the ultimate rock and roll survivors. A renaissance man who wrote, produced and performed during the height of the 60s, Bob is best known as a founding member of The Woolies, who took their high energy take on Bo Diddley’s Who Do You Love to the number 3 spot on the WKNR Music Guide in January of 1967. This week, we celebrate the Woolies' four decade career as Bob takes us from the smokey clubs of the Motor City to the heart of the LA music machine. We'll hear some rarities from a brand new Woolies CD and learn how they became Chuck Berry's favorite back-up band.
Hear the show 25 minutes 23 MB MP3

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Big News for Detroit's Newspapers

Growing up, I was a Free Press reader. They had Dick Tracy and Joe Falls. Lately, I've been a News fan. They have Sue Whitall and Lynn Henning. The Joint Operating Agreement that allowed the two papers to co-exist, yet still compete, was something unusual when it came to be and the announcement of how Knight Ridder and Gannett decided to realign their interests in the two dailies is just as unique.

Knight Ridder is selling its partnership interest in the Detroit Newspaper Agency to MediaNews and Gannett in a round about way. MediaNews Group is buying The Detroit News from Gannett and Gannett is buying the Detroit Free Press and will become the general partner in the new entity.
Sometime in 2006 readers will find the News on their doorsteps in the morning. Both papers will publish Saturday editions while the Freep will become the sole publisher of a Sunday edition.

One of the casualties of the deal is Freep editor/publisher Carol Leigh Hutton. The official press release states that she will "will remain with Knight Ridder" along with soon to be ex-Freep managing editor Jerry Teagan. Mark Silverman, the current News editor/publisher will join the Gannett corporate staff.

David L. Hunke, former president and publisher of the Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle will be the new Freep president and publisher, while former Des Moines (IA) Register editor Paul E. Anger will wield the blue pen as Freep editor. David J. Butler, formerly editor of the MediaNews LA Daily News will become editor/publisher of The News.

Mark S. Mikolajczyk, senior vice president/operations for the Gannett Newspaper Division, will become president and CEO of the Detroit Newspaper Partnership, while acting CEO Ed Humphrey "will return to his regular duties" as senior vice president/circulation.

Mark Silverman will join the Gannett's Newspaper Division corporate news staff. He was publisher and editor of The Detroit News.