Posts Tagged ‘Radio & Records’

RIP: Radio & Records last issue Friday

Radio & RecordsMy addiction to the trade newspaper Radio & Records began at age 17. 29 years later, it’s over.

Nielsen Media announced that the last issue of R&R will be Friday’s, and the radioandrecords.com website has already been taken down.

My first exposure was those many years ago in the lounge area on the second floor of the old Gannon Theatre, where outside of the faculty offices, you could do some last minute homework, get your WERG or theatre mail, pontificate on the latest move in Erie media (had to start somewhere!), and read R&R.

I did a lot of reading R&R.
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Star 104, Connie Media dominate Fall 2008 book

In one of most lopsided ratings outcomes since corporations took over most of Erie radio, WRTS/Star 104 and Connoisseur Media emerged with a much greater share of audience than rival WXKC/Classy 100 and Citadel Communications.

As part of a near Connoisseur sweep of the top 5 slots in the Erie radio ratings, WRTS increased their average share by 40 percent, beating WXKC by almost six share points. The rest of the top five were WRKT/Rocket 101 at #3, WTWF/93.9 The Wolf at #4, and WXBB/Bob-FM 94.7 fifth.
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The Feed for Friday, November 7th

Editor’s note: Sound off, give a shout out on “Deep Background,” our totally-random open discussion of all things Erie media.

  • WJET-TV in HDTV: On Wednesday WJET announced that they are now broadcasting High Definition over the air on their 24.1 subchannel. Although currently in low-power, the station says they’ll be full power upon the digital switchover. A quick check of the HDTV tier on Time Warner Cable shows no channel designation for WJET-HD yet.
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Attention traditional media: resistance is futile

It’s been over 10 years now since those of us who read trade magazines started to see the word “convergence.”

Its original definition meant the mixture of the computer world with, among other areas, the broadcasting world. I’ve expanded the definition these days to basically mean that the era of single stream newspapers, radio, TV stations, and cable networks are over. People in media (note the plural) now create content using multiple forms of creative engines to output to multiple streams.

My readers at the Erie Times News are saying right now, “duh, what else is new?!?” That’s because they have been living in a fully convergent media world for years now. No longer can a reporter armed with a reporter’s notebook and a photographer shooting large format film go cover a story. Now they may bring a third reporter to shoot video or capture an audio interview, or the reporter wears a couple hats to ready the content for multiple streams: ink on newsprint, online text, photos, video, and podcasts.
I have to credit the future-thinking of the Times Publishing Co. as they’ve placed their bets on the developing convergent technologies years ago through today.

Of course, everyone in media in Erie is developing their multiple output streams; it’s just that some are further along than others. And because of where we are in the development cycle, and the level of investment by our media companies, there are often significant irritants to the media consumer that I’d love to see corrected, as well as missed opportunities to build audience and revenues. See if any of these issues resonate with you: (more…)