WRDV is a fun station. I’ve encountered a few folks involved with it over the years. Unfortunately, the signal doesn’t reach as far north as Chatham, our town, and I seldom listen on the computer – but there are a couple of stations now that have asked me to listen in and one to be involved. We’ll see how that goes….
Good luck with the show (although I’m sure you’ll be great). We’ll be at an outdoor New Jersey Symphony Orchestra concert so I’ll probably miss most of it unfortunately. (For what it’s worth, NJSO has turned into a remarkably good orchestra, and this annual event is a local “big deal” at Giralda Farms, a former estate, now office park.)
Thanks for helping keep this list alive, Adam. By the way, who else is still aboard and reading these missives?
Paul
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Jerry. Didn't know you were on this listserv. How about an update on BRU-exit? After asking for alumni input, there's been radio silence about plans to sell WBRU's license for cash. What can you tell us? Thànks. BL
Fantastic, Adam! Good luck, and have fun!--
On Saturday, June 24, 2017 at 12:27:52 PM UTC-4, Adam Blistein wrote:To keep myself out of trouble (mostly) in my retirement I've latched on to a community radio station in the northern suburbs of Philadelphia. I don't yet have a regular shift, but I am cleared to be anyone's replacement. In most cases that means subbing for people weekday afternoons when the station has a "big band/swing" format. That format admits of a lot of interpretations, and I get to play the 20s-40s jazz that I've been listening to a lot for the last 30-40 years. However, evenings and weekends, the station has an oldies format that admits of a variety of niches, and tomorrow (June 25) night from 7-10EDT I have one of those slots for the first time. The first hour will sound mostly like SNDP in the mid-sixties; the last two, like BRU-FM in the Summer of '70.
Call letters are WRDV-FM, and it has four different low-power frequencies in the Philadelphia area. Its Internet stream (WRDV.org) is pretty reliable.
Adam
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I know I sounds like I’m beating a dead horse, but as the new-age folks say, I think they’re giving up before the miracle happens.
Paul
Lou Gehrig’s disease has restricted the things I can do, but I do follow these WBRU posts. Don Harris ‘65
From: wb...@googlegroups.com [mailto:wb...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ginger Ignatoff
Sent: Sunday, June 25, 2017 12:23 PM
To: wb...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Back to the Summer of '70
Reading, but my responses don't usually come through to the group. Not clear why to me -- then again I'm not that involved in radio at this point, and even my listening hours are a limited.
Ginger (Heinbockel) Ignatoff
On Sat, Jun 24, 2017 at 4:35 PM, b&p <bsa...@verizon.net> wrote:
WRDV is a fun station. I’ve encountered a few folks involved with it over the years. Unfortunately, the signal doesn’t reach as far north as Chatham, our town, and I seldom listen on the computer – but there are a couple of stations now that have asked me to listen in and one to be involved. We’ll see how that goes….
Good luck with the show (although I’m sure you’ll be great). We’ll be at an outdoor New Jersey Symphony Orchestra concert so I’ll probably miss most of it unfortunately. (For what it’s worth, NJSO has turned into a remarkably good orchestra, and this annual event is a local “big deal” at Giralda Farms, a former estate, now office park.)
Thanks for helping keep this list alive, Adam. By the way, who else is still aboard and reading these missives?
Paul
From: wb...@googlegroups.com [mailto:wb...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Adam Blistein
Sent: Saturday, June 24, 2017 12:28 PM
To: WBRU
Subject: Back to the Summer of '70
To keep myself out of trouble (mostly) in my retirement I've latched on to a community radio station in the northern suburbs of Philadelphia. I don't yet have a regular shift, but I am cleared to be anyone's replacement. In most cases that means subbing for people weekday afternoons when the station has a "big band/swing" format. That format admits of a lot of interpretations, and I get to play the 20s-40s jazz that I've been listening to a lot for the last 30-40 years. However, evenings and weekends, the station has an oldies format that admits of a variety of niches, and tomorrow (June 25) night from 7-10EDT I have one of those slots for the first time. The first hour will sound mostly like SNDP in the mid-sixties; the last two, like BRU-FM in the Summer of '70.
Call letters are WRDV-FM, and it has four different low-power frequencies in the Philadelphia area. Its Internet stream (WRDV.org) is pretty reliable.
Adam
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Ginger
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This topic has “rented a lot of space in my head.”
I think as an industry, commercial radio is in an eclipse, but not a complete death spiral. Yes, SOME commercial terrestrial radio is dying, but not all. What is surviving and, in many cases, thriving is live and local radio. This is particularly true in small and large markets. Providence, of course, is in between. But allow me to cite another in-between commercial success: WKXW, Trenton, NJ, who went from being stuck between the “big dogs” of Philadelphia and New York City to proudly being “not New York, not Philadelphia – we are NEW JERSEY 101.5” and carving out its own large audience. They saw an opportunity, created a need and then fulfilled it. They did it with traffic and live and local talk (a lot of it “Jersey Boy” and “Jersey Girl” stuff, but that was the available underserved audience.) Love ‘em or hate ‘em, there’s hardly a person in NJ who doesn’t know their tag line. They had what ‘BRU has: an amorphous entity in the shadow of a major market, but a big enough signal to make a serious impact in that shadow.*
Yes, change is constant. The industry is changing dramatically. The trend of huge corporate consolidation is in uproar as many of the largest consolidators are flirting with bankruptcy as a result of over-extension, “under-localization” and grubby profit taking. Many stations are being spun off (or are about to be) to local owners. As a locally owned and operated entity, WBRU is already ahead in that game – plus is has the benefit of not having to nourish stockholders’ bank accounts.
As Jack, Jerry, Pete and many others here know, we fought settling for a non-commercial license for 13 years so that we would have the experience of doing real-world radio on a real radio station. Yes, of course NPR has become real, and to my mind, certain things about WBRU have not – like playing pre-programmed songs while reading off flash cards; that’s exactly what WBRU’s rock format was created NOT to do. No wonder students don’t want to be on the air and will pre-record their voice-tracks; heck, by the end of my radio career, I was being paid to do that and walked away from it. For the station to survive, I think this has to change. Run “the robot” overnight if one has to, but fun and satisfaction have to be part of the equation – “robot radio” is neither.
But let me get back to this: as Bill mentioned, part of the learning experience is running the business. WBRU shouldn’t sell its prime asset for making money. Yes, improve the net presence, but radio is wherever you are. (I’m not saying anything everyone here doesn’t already know). The station can create its own market. It has huge territorial reach over the air; exploit that. Learn business by saving one. Create special product and sell it.* Do what we did at the beginning before we had ratings: deliver audience. When I return now for reunions, I am always impressed by the creativity and depth of the students (and wonder if I was ever that smart); let them turn that creativity loose on the business side as well as programming. I don’t know if this is being done now – or how – but surrendering the prime asset that essential to the rebuilding of the station is not the way, in my opinion. A one-time quick-fix “monetizing” feels good for the moment but then just kicks the can down the line.
Let me also toss another log onto this fire. We are living through one of the most volatile political periods in modern times. The urgency of Viet Nam and the political upheavals of the ‘60s and ‘70s fueled the rise of progressive FM radio and WBRU. This is a parallel period. Why give up the megaphone?? Yes, on-line is great for news, opinion and special projects, but adding on-air extends the impact.
I’m sorry if I rambled – it’s too easy to do that on a subject this broad. I certainly acknowledge that it is “not our station” anymore, but it is our legacy. I am also not being a Luddite; this is not buggy-whips-vs.-transportation but rather about maintaining, transforming and growing one still viable form of communication even while embracing another (cyber), and communication is the root of the discussion. Call me an idealist if you will (I’ve been called worse, and no doubt will be again) but if we agree that WBRU is backed against a wall, I see two options: concede defeat or come out fighting. Conceding defeat is, in my opinion, not the lesson that station involvement should be teaching.
Best to all,
Paul
*I don’t know if there is an equivalent option – probably not an equal one - but what New Jersey 101.5 did to distinguish itself at the beginning was create the first New Jersey-centric traffic report, broadcast it reliably every 15 minutes in rush hours, and create a “local language”: traffic is never New York- or Philly-bound but rather “leaving New Jersey.” Even some of the traffic reporters have NJ-based air names: “Tom Rivers,” for example, is a take-off on the town of Toms River. I can hear it now – “Warwick Cranston” (Byron Cranston’s brother?) with the traffic….
Paul Payton
Have Voice, Will Travel
VOICE-OVERS – AUDIO SERVICES FOR VIDEO
Presence Records/Paytoons, BMI
ROB CARLSON & THE BENEFIT STREET BAND
THE FABULOUS DUDES
From: wb...@googlegroups.com [mailto:wb...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jack Edmonston
Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2017 10:55 AM
To: wb...@googlegroups.com
Cc: Jerry Hubeny
Subject: Re: Back to the Summer of '70
I believe that only commercial terrestrial radio is dying. Not public radio and other forms. Everything changes. No exceptions. I worked for a periodical publisher (PC World, Computerworld, Macworld) that is now completely digital in US.