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On Jan 6, 5:39*am, PocketRadio wrote:
On Jan 6, 3:30 am, wrote: Tuning the nightstand radio to the usual late night talk show on WCCO Minneapolis I hear a familiar but misplaced voice - not Al Malmberg but John Grayson who is supposed to be on another of the few "good neighbor" radio stations left - KMOX in St. Louis. Hmm...weird. Must be the filters on the cheap radio. Oh well I'll listen to the other local talk show on KDKA Pittsburgh. WHAT the eff? Same voice and same show as is on WCCO and KMOX! This is becoming twilight zone material. I'll try WBX 1030 out of Boston - SAME VOICE SAME SHOW! Are you kidding me? This can't be happening! A search of the web today confirmed my deepest fear - syndication has killed the few remaining local late nighters that have become my companions over the years. Crap. Not even a warning. Not even time to get used to the idea. What a class organization you are CBS Radio. No wonder you are going broke. Good riddance. Guess it's shortwave and Brother Stair to put me to sleep at night henceforth. He's better than a somonex laced Nyquil cocktail. From the Minneapolis Star Tribunehttp://www.startribune.com/entertainment/tv/37095119.html?page=2&c=y No happy trails for WCCO's Malmberg Late-night radio host of 12 years was fired and didn't get a chance to bid farewell to listeners. By PAUL WALSH, Star Tribune The smooth, friendly and rich sound of host Al Malmberg's voice on WCCO Radio has been silenced before he ever got a chance to say goodbye to his listeners of 12 years. Malmberg, 57, was fired last week in the latest in a series of cost- cutting measures taken by the CBS-owned station and by other media outlets in the Twin Cities and elsewhere around the country. The station also let go Brad Walton, who was behind the microphone on weekends overnight for about the same length of time as Malmberg. "I've never had a more loyal audience," said Malmberg. "You are a companion, and people felt like they knew you. Unfortunately, that's been lost." Malmberg grew up in Richfield and remembers as a child hearing his father, Larry, play the accordion as a live in-studio musician for WCCO Radio and later WCCO-TV. "He took it hard," Malmberg said, recalling when he told his 85-year- old father the news. "I think he took it harder than I did." Malmberg's slot has been filled by Jon Grayson's CBS-syndicated "Overnight America," heard weekdays from midnight to 5 a.m. Its other markets include St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Boston. Turning to syndication overnight breaks "The Good Neighbor's" practice of having only locally produced programming. WCCO program director Wendy Paulson described Grayson's show as not syndication but a "custom simulcast" between the four stations. Local weather coverage will continue overnight. Malmberg said he asked his bosses at the time of his firing, " 'When is my last night?' And they said, 'Last night.' "I couldn't say goodbye to my audience. It took me 25 years to make it to WCCO." He even had in the back of his mind how he wanted to sign off if he had been given the chance to plan his final show. "I would put on Roy Rogers and sing 'Happy Trails,'" he said, reprising how he departed for WCCO from his own nationally syndicated radio talk show that was based in Colorado Springs, Colo. "It would have been hokey, but it would have been cool." Paulson said "Al and Brad were beloved by our listeners, and we completely understand that." She said their departures were because of "economic events that we are not immune to." The CBS fools are some of the last IBOC holdouts. If these guys can't provide content for AM & FM how will they be able to fill up their HD channels? Get ready for more Rush, Hannity, Ryan Seacrest and more. Who knew radio could cheapen radio even further? |
#2
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On Jan 6, 3:05*pm, Pocket-Radio wrote:
On Jan 6, 5:39*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Jan 6, 3:30 am, wrote: Tuning the nightstand radio to the usual late night talk show on WCCO Minneapolis I hear a familiar but misplaced voice - not Al Malmberg but John Grayson who is supposed to be on another of the few "good neighbor" radio stations left - KMOX in St. Louis. Hmm...weird. Must be the filters on the cheap radio. Oh well I'll listen to the other local talk show on KDKA Pittsburgh. WHAT the eff? Same voice and same show as is on WCCO and KMOX! This is becoming twilight zone material. I'll try WBX 1030 out of Boston - SAME VOICE SAME SHOW! Are you kidding me? This can't be happening! A search of the web today confirmed my deepest fear - syndication has killed the few remaining local late nighters that have become my companions over the years. Crap. Not even a warning. Not even time to get used to the idea. What a class organization you are CBS Radio. No wonder you are going broke. Good riddance. Guess it's shortwave and Brother Stair to put me to sleep at night henceforth. He's better than a somonex laced Nyquil cocktail. From the Minneapolis Star Tribunehttp://www.startribune.com/entertainment/tv/37095119.html?page=2&c=y No happy trails for WCCO's Malmberg Late-night radio host of 12 years was fired and didn't get a chance to bid farewell to listeners. By PAUL WALSH, Star Tribune The smooth, friendly and rich sound of host Al Malmberg's voice on WCCO Radio has been silenced before he ever got a chance to say goodbye to his listeners of 12 years. Malmberg, 57, was fired last week in the latest in a series of cost- cutting measures taken by the CBS-owned station and by other media outlets in the Twin Cities and elsewhere around the country. The station also let go Brad Walton, who was behind the microphone on weekends overnight for about the same length of time as Malmberg. "I've never had a more loyal audience," said Malmberg. "You are a companion, and people felt like they knew you. Unfortunately, that's been lost." Malmberg grew up in Richfield and remembers as a child hearing his father, Larry, play the accordion as a live in-studio musician for WCCO Radio and later WCCO-TV. "He took it hard," Malmberg said, recalling when he told his 85-year- old father the news. "I think he took it harder than I did." Malmberg's slot has been filled by Jon Grayson's CBS-syndicated "Overnight America," heard weekdays from midnight to 5 a.m. Its other markets include St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Boston. Turning to syndication overnight breaks "The Good Neighbor's" practice of having only locally produced programming. WCCO program director Wendy Paulson described Grayson's show as not syndication but a "custom simulcast" between the four stations. Local weather coverage will continue overnight. Malmberg said he asked his bosses at the time of his firing, " 'When is my last night?' And they said, 'Last night.' "I couldn't say goodbye to my audience. It took me 25 years to make it to WCCO." He even had in the back of his mind how he wanted to sign off if he had been given the chance to plan his final show. "I would put on Roy Rogers and sing 'Happy Trails,'" he said, reprising how he departed for WCCO from his own nationally syndicated radio talk show that was based in Colorado Springs, Colo. "It would have been hokey, but it would have been cool." Paulson said "Al and Brad were beloved by our listeners, and we completely understand that." She said their departures were because of "economic events that we are not immune to." The CBS fools are some of the last IBOC holdouts. If these guys can't provide content for AM & FM how will they be able to fill up their HD channels? - Get ready for more Rush, Hannity, Ryan Seacrest - and more. - Who knew radio could cheapen radio even further? Free Over-the-Air AM & FM Radio : It's About : choice, Choice. CHOICE ! |
#3
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On Jan 6, 7:11*pm, RHF wrote:
On Jan 6, 3:05*pm, Pocket-Radio wrote: On Jan 6, 5:39*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Jan 6, 3:30 am, wrote: Tuning the nightstand radio to the usual late night talk show on WCCO Minneapolis I hear a familiar but misplaced voice - not Al Malmberg but John Grayson who is supposed to be on another of the few "good neighbor" radio stations left - KMOX in St. Louis. Hmm...weird. Must be the filters on the cheap radio. Oh well I'll listen to the other local talk show on KDKA Pittsburgh. WHAT the eff? Same voice and same show as is on WCCO and KMOX! This is becoming twilight zone material. I'll try WBX 1030 out of Boston - SAME VOICE SAME SHOW! Are you kidding me? This can't be happening! A search of the web today confirmed my deepest fear - syndication has killed the few remaining local late nighters that have become my companions over the years. Crap. Not even a warning. Not even time to get used to the idea. What a class organization you are CBS Radio. No wonder you are going broke.. Good riddance. Guess it's shortwave and Brother Stair to put me to sleep at night henceforth. He's better than a somonex laced Nyquil cocktail. From the Minneapolis Star Tribunehttp://www.startribune.com/entertainment/tv/37095119.html?page=2&c=y No happy trails for WCCO's Malmberg Late-night radio host of 12 years was fired and didn't get a chance to bid farewell to listeners. By PAUL WALSH, Star Tribune The smooth, friendly and rich sound of host Al Malmberg's voice on WCCO Radio has been silenced before he ever got a chance to say goodbye to his listeners of 12 years. Malmberg, 57, was fired last week in the latest in a series of cost- cutting measures taken by the CBS-owned station and by other media outlets in the Twin Cities and elsewhere around the country. The station also let go Brad Walton, who was behind the microphone on weekends overnight for about the same length of time as Malmberg. "I've never had a more loyal audience," said Malmberg. "You are a companion, and people felt like they knew you. Unfortunately, that's been lost." Malmberg grew up in Richfield and remembers as a child hearing his father, Larry, play the accordion as a live in-studio musician for WCCO Radio and later WCCO-TV. "He took it hard," Malmberg said, recalling when he told his 85-year- old father the news. "I think he took it harder than I did." Malmberg's slot has been filled by Jon Grayson's CBS-syndicated "Overnight America," heard weekdays from midnight to 5 a.m. Its other markets include St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Boston. Turning to syndication overnight breaks "The Good Neighbor's" practice of having only locally produced programming. WCCO program director Wendy Paulson described Grayson's show as not syndication but a "custom simulcast" between the four stations. Local weather coverage will continue overnight. Malmberg said he asked his bosses at the time of his firing, " 'When is my last night?' And they said, 'Last night.' "I couldn't say goodbye to my audience. It took me 25 years to make it to WCCO." He even had in the back of his mind how he wanted to sign off if he had been given the chance to plan his final show. "I would put on Roy Rogers and sing 'Happy Trails,'" he said, reprising how he departed for WCCO from his own nationally syndicated radio talk show that was based in Colorado Springs, Colo. "It would have been hokey, but it would have been cool." Paulson said "Al and Brad were beloved by our listeners, and we completely understand that." She said their departures were because of "economic events that we are not immune to." The CBS fools are some of the last IBOC holdouts. If these guys can't provide content for AM & FM how will they be able to fill up their HD channels? - Get ready for more Rush, Hannity, Ryan Seacrest - and more. - Who knew radio could cheapen radio even further? - Free Over-the-Air AM & FM Radio : - It's About : choice, Choice. CHOICE ! - *. IBOC : More Choice Coming To FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels Think about this if Satellite Radio Strength is 100+ Channels of diverse Audio Programming and the Internet also offers that and a lot more. Then one of terrestrial AM & FM Radios short comings is the limited number of Local Offering Available to -wrt- Sat-Radio and Net-Radio : Now FM HD-Radio offers the potential for Doubling (2X) the Number of Free Over-the-Air FM Radio HD2 "Choices" for Radio Listeners Cookie-Cuter Copy-Cat Clones of what can be heard on both Sat-Radio and Net-Radio -IF- These are Valid Choices and Worthwhile Audio Programming on Sat-Radio and Net-Radio : They Will Be Equally Valid Choices and Equally Worthwhile Audio Programming on FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels. Plus the all the Free Over-the-Air FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels will cost the Audio Consumer NOTHING. -as-in- NO MONTHLY FEES [.] ~ RHF |
#4
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On Jan 6, 6:05*pm, Pocket-Radio wrote:
On Jan 6, 5:39*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Jan 6, 3:30 am, wrote: Tuning the nightstand radio to the usual late night talk show on WCCO Minneapolis I hear a familiar but misplaced voice - not Al Malmberg but John Grayson who is supposed to be on another of the few "good neighbor" radio stations left - KMOX in St. Louis. Hmm...weird. Must be the filters on the cheap radio. Oh well I'll listen to the other local talk show on KDKA Pittsburgh. WHAT the eff? Same voice and same show as is on WCCO and KMOX! This is becoming twilight zone material. I'll try WBX 1030 out of Boston - SAME VOICE SAME SHOW! Are you kidding me? This can't be happening! A search of the web today confirmed my deepest fear - syndication has killed the few remaining local late nighters that have become my companions over the years. Crap. Not even a warning. Not even time to get used to the idea. What a class organization you are CBS Radio. No wonder you are going broke. Good riddance. Guess it's shortwave and Brother Stair to put me to sleep at night henceforth. He's better than a somonex laced Nyquil cocktail. From the Minneapolis Star Tribunehttp://www.startribune.com/entertainment/tv/37095119.html?page=2&c=y No happy trails for WCCO's Malmberg Late-night radio host of 12 years was fired and didn't get a chance to bid farewell to listeners. By PAUL WALSH, Star Tribune The smooth, friendly and rich sound of host Al Malmberg's voice on WCCO Radio has been silenced before he ever got a chance to say goodbye to his listeners of 12 years. Malmberg, 57, was fired last week in the latest in a series of cost- cutting measures taken by the CBS-owned station and by other media outlets in the Twin Cities and elsewhere around the country. The station also let go Brad Walton, who was behind the microphone on weekends overnight for about the same length of time as Malmberg. "I've never had a more loyal audience," said Malmberg. "You are a companion, and people felt like they knew you. Unfortunately, that's been lost." Malmberg grew up in Richfield and remembers as a child hearing his father, Larry, play the accordion as a live in-studio musician for WCCO Radio and later WCCO-TV. "He took it hard," Malmberg said, recalling when he told his 85-year- old father the news. "I think he took it harder than I did." Malmberg's slot has been filled by Jon Grayson's CBS-syndicated "Overnight America," heard weekdays from midnight to 5 a.m. Its other markets include St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Boston. Turning to syndication overnight breaks "The Good Neighbor's" practice of having only locally produced programming. WCCO program director Wendy Paulson described Grayson's show as not syndication but a "custom simulcast" between the four stations. Local weather coverage will continue overnight. Malmberg said he asked his bosses at the time of his firing, " 'When is my last night?' And they said, 'Last night.' "I couldn't say goodbye to my audience. It took me 25 years to make it to WCCO." He even had in the back of his mind how he wanted to sign off if he had been given the chance to plan his final show. "I would put on Roy Rogers and sing 'Happy Trails,'" he said, reprising how he departed for WCCO from his own nationally syndicated radio talk show that was based in Colorado Springs, Colo. "It would have been hokey, but it would have been cool." Paulson said "Al and Brad were beloved by our listeners, and we completely understand that." She said their departures were because of "economic events that we are not immune to." The CBS fools are some of the last IBOC holdouts. If these guys can't provide content for AM & FM how will they be able to fill up their HD channels? Get ready for more Rush, Hannity, Ryan Seacrest and more. Who knew radio could cheapen radio even further?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "Bonneville pulls iChannel Music" Bonneville has pulled the plug on its iChannel Music HD Network and streaming. For the most part, it has replaced the HD multicast with WorldBand Media content (brokered ethnic programming). iChannel allowed indie bands to upload their music online for consideration. The network included Chicago at 101.9 HD2; Washington D.C. at 103.5 HD2; Salt Lake City at 102.7 HD2; St. Louis at 101.1 HD2 and Phoenix at 92.3 HD2. The stream is dead, but the site remains: www.ichannelmusic.com. From the site: “Well today is iChannel's last day. It's hard to believe that it's been 3 years since we started. And I think I speak for everyone here when I say no matter how disappointed I am at the moment, I wouldn't trade my time here for anything in the world. I've had the opportunity to work with some extremely cool and talented people over the past few years and made some life-long friends. So I just want to say thanks to everyone that's been a part of making my time at iChannel so special...Ken, Kane, Rider, Virg, JK, Huck, Big Red, Dante, Aimster, Presly, Sky, Julie, Logan, AC, Matt, Eric, Sammy, Jamie, Zip, Christy, Josh, the other interns whose names I never bothered to learn, and the corporate folks who made it all possible. It was a pleasure working with all of you. And also thanks to all of the bands. (Don't worry...not going to mention all of them by name). And finally, thanks to everyone who tuned in to iChannel, checked out the website, or came to our events. Without you, we would have just been talking to ourselves.” RBR/TVBR observation: If it isn’t making money, the plug will get pulled. That’s what most likely happened here. WorldBand Media brings in the dollars instead. We commend Bonneville for giving it a shot—it allowed radio to expose a lot of new, unsigned indie bands from around the world. CC Radio's eRockster HD2 format is still around at a good handful of stations and still outstanding. If that gets shuttered, a good bunch of us just might be done with HD Radio listening altoghether. http://www.rbr.com/radio/12113.html |
#5
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On Jan 6, 10:28*pm, RHF wrote:
On Jan 6, 7:11*pm, RHF wrote: On Jan 6, 3:05*pm, Pocket-Radio wrote: On Jan 6, 5:39*am, PocketRadio wrote: On Jan 6, 3:30 am, wrote: Tuning the nightstand radio to the usual late night talk show on WCCO Minneapolis I hear a familiar but misplaced voice - not Al Malmberg but John Grayson who is supposed to be on another of the few "good neighbor" radio stations left - KMOX in St. Louis. Hmm...weird. Must be the filters on the cheap radio. Oh well I'll listen to the other local talk show on KDKA Pittsburgh. WHAT the eff? Same voice and same show as is on WCCO and KMOX! This is becoming twilight zone material. I'll try WBX 1030 out of Boston - SAME VOICE SAME SHOW! Are you kidding me? This can't be happening! A search of the web today confirmed my deepest fear - syndication has killed the few remaining local late nighters that have become my companions over the years. Crap. Not even a warning. Not even time to get used to the idea. What a class organization you are CBS Radio. No wonder you are going broke. Good riddance. Guess it's shortwave and Brother Stair to put me to sleep at night henceforth. He's better than a somonex laced Nyquil cocktail. From the Minneapolis Star Tribunehttp://www.startribune.com/entertainment/tv/37095119.html?page=2&c=y No happy trails for WCCO's Malmberg Late-night radio host of 12 years was fired and didn't get a chance to bid farewell to listeners. By PAUL WALSH, Star Tribune The smooth, friendly and rich sound of host Al Malmberg's voice on WCCO Radio has been silenced before he ever got a chance to say goodbye to his listeners of 12 years. Malmberg, 57, was fired last week in the latest in a series of cost- cutting measures taken by the CBS-owned station and by other media outlets in the Twin Cities and elsewhere around the country. The station also let go Brad Walton, who was behind the microphone on weekends overnight for about the same length of time as Malmberg. "I've never had a more loyal audience," said Malmberg. "You are a companion, and people felt like they knew you. Unfortunately, that's been lost." Malmberg grew up in Richfield and remembers as a child hearing his father, Larry, play the accordion as a live in-studio musician for WCCO Radio and later WCCO-TV. "He took it hard," Malmberg said, recalling when he told his 85-year- old father the news. "I think he took it harder than I did." Malmberg's slot has been filled by Jon Grayson's CBS-syndicated "Overnight America," heard weekdays from midnight to 5 a.m. Its other markets include St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Boston. Turning to syndication overnight breaks "The Good Neighbor's" practice of having only locally produced programming. WCCO program director Wendy Paulson described Grayson's show as not syndication but a "custom simulcast" between the four stations. Local weather coverage will continue overnight. Malmberg said he asked his bosses at the time of his firing, " 'When is my last night?' And they said, 'Last night.' "I couldn't say goodbye to my audience. It took me 25 years to make it to WCCO." He even had in the back of his mind how he wanted to sign off if he had been given the chance to plan his final show. "I would put on Roy Rogers and sing 'Happy Trails,'" he said, reprising how he departed for WCCO from his own nationally syndicated radio talk show that was based in Colorado Springs, Colo. "It would have been hokey, but it would have been cool." Paulson said "Al and Brad were beloved by our listeners, and we completely understand that." She said their departures were because of "economic events that we are not immune to." The CBS fools are some of the last IBOC holdouts. If these guys can't provide content for AM & FM how will they be able to fill up their HD channels? - Get ready for more Rush, Hannity, Ryan Seacrest - and more. - Who knew radio could cheapen radio even further? - Free Over-the-Air AM & FM Radio : - It's About : choice, Choice. CHOICE ! - *. IBOC : More Choice Coming To FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels Think about this if Satellite Radio Strength is 100+ Channels of diverse Audio Programming and the Internet also offers that and a lot more. Then one of terrestrial AM & FM Radios short comings is the limited number of Local Offering Available to -wrt- Sat-Radio and Net-Radio : Now FM HD-Radio offers the potential for Doubling (2X) the Number of Free Over-the-Air FM Radio HD2 "Choices" for Radio Listeners Cookie-Cuter Copy-Cat Clones of what can be heard on both Sat-Radio and Net-Radio -IF- These are Valid Choices and Worthwhile Audio Programming on Sat-Radio and Net-Radio : They Will Be Equally Valid Choices and Equally Worthwhile Audio Programming on FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels. Plus the all the Free Over-the-Air FM HD-Radio HD2 Channels will cost the Audio Consumer NOTHING. -as-in- NO MONTHLY FEES [.] ~ RHF *.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "Reduced quality concerns" "Another such conflict arises from the extra free programs available today. iBiquity is seeking FCC approval for conditional access, that is, enabling the extra programs to be available only by paid subscription (on future models of HD Radio). NDS, a maker of digital media encryption technology, has a deal with iBiquity to provide HD Radio with an encrypted content-delivery system called RadioGuard. NDS claims that RadioGuard will provide additional revenue-generating possibilities. iBiquity has stated that RadioGuard will become a standard feature of the HD Radio system. These competing capabilities mean that purchasers of early models of HD Radio have no guarantees of continued broadcasts of either high-quality audio or extra channels. Audio quality will suffer as broadcasters decide to subdivide their streams into extra HD-2 and HD-3 channels. And if the extra channels become subscription channels, they will become invisible to older radios without RadioGuard (and to those unwilling to pay for them)." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_Radio "Now on HD Radio: Subscriptions, Pay Per Hear, and More" "A new 'conditional broadcasting' feature for HD Radio called RadioGuard, from NDS, will allow owners of compatible HD radios to pay for premium content via a subscription, a one-time charge, or as part of a sponsored deal... They're primarily looking at home and car use right now because it's hard to design a device like this to consume so little power that it can be carried away from a power source." http://blog.wired.com/music/2007/04/..._hd_radio.html "Can all HD Radio tuners get these extra channels?" "Multicasting was developed after the first generation of HD Radio tuners hit the market. While all HD Radio tuners will pick up the station's primary digital channel, only radios that are designated multicast-capable will be able to pick up HD-2 and any additional subchannels. Multicasting capability has since become a standard feature on HD Radio tuners. At this point, most HD Radio tuners on the market can receive multicast channels." http://tinyurl.com/5ldqed "iBiquity: How a closed-source model is killing HD Radio" "Though most consumers don’t know it, there are software revisions appearing with HD Radio right now, and most radios are not field- upgradable — it’s not 'safe' to invest big bucks in receivers yet." http://tinyurl.com/3acf25 LMFAO! |
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