Category Archives: Media & Entertainment
Another honor for Clyde Lear
Radio jobs fell 27% since 1990
There are now more Americans working for online publishers and broadcasters than for newspapers, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employment at online outlets first eclipsed newspapers in October 2015. […] Radio broadcasting jobs fell from January 1990 to March by about 27 percent.
Rough day (Deadwood)
Solitary Confinement in Virtual Reality
Snowden
Purple Rain by Ian Emmerson
While not a fan of Prince… or his signature song… I do very much like this cover by Ian Emmerson
Spring on the Prairie Garden Trust
A perfect spring day on the Prairie Garden Trust.
Will radio find a home in your next car?
This article says yes (I think). Everyone seems to agree younger listeners are turning to their phones for audio but there are still lots of folks listening to the radio.
Ninety-three percent of U.S. adults listen to radio weekly, according to Nielsen. 96 percent of U.S. adults (and 94 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds) owned a radio in 2008; today, 79 percent of adults do, and just 68 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds do.
The big radio companies are apparently in the shit but that might be the result of some bad business decisions as much as changing listening habits.
iHeartMedia (formerly Clear Channel), the largest radio company in the U.S. with 850 stations, currently trades for just around a dollar a share, down from around $6 last April. The company is loaded down with debt, and restructuring or bankruptcy could be in its future. Cumulus Media, which owns 454 stations, trades at just $0.54 a share, and NASDAQ has warned that its share price is so low it could be delisted. Emmis Communications stock trades under a dollar. And CBS announced last month that it is planning to sell off its radio stations.
I could certainly have done without the CD player in my MINI. And probably the radio but I don’t think that was even an option.
Warren Krech: 40 years behind the mic
Warren (“Krech in the Morning”) Krech is retiring from radio at the end of the month, wrapping up a career that started in 1972. He’s been on the air in Jefferson City, Missouri, since 1984. Almost half a century of getting up every morning at 3 a.m. Be hard to find someone more involved in his community than Warren and it’s hard not think in terms of “end of an era.” He has seen and been part of a lot of changes in radio and talked about them in this 16 minute chat/shoptalk.