A friend of mine, Jennifer, sent me a note the other day,
proud that her son, who started his radio career in Waupaca, had just taken a
new job with a radio station in Fond du Lac. The fellow her son replaced in
Fond du Lac had been with that station for more than two decades.
One of Jennifer’s workmates threw shade (as they say
nowadays) on the man my friend’s son replaced, implying that he must not have
been good enough to work at a station in a larger market and his career had
stalled there.
Two things that get me wound up easily are the idea that
people who work in smaller radio markets aren’t as talented as people who work
in larger markets, and people who say things like “oh, you’re in radio – do you
think you’ll ever make it to TV?”
For those who don’t know me, I’ve worked in both radio and
TV, and in markets small and large: the smallest was the Oshkosh/Appleton/Fox
Valley market, and the largest was Los Angeles. And there were a few big
markets in between, before I landed in Madison. And I loved working in TV, but
my heart is in radio. It was fun working in the nation’s second-largest market,
LA, but even more fun in Madison.
One of my favorite stories about radio and talent is one
that’s quite personal. Circumstances were such in 1988 that I was compelled to
relocate from Los Angeles to the Madison area. It’s too long a story to go into
here, but when the move back to Wisconsin - where I was born and raised - became
inevitable, I called the CEO of the broadcast group I’d worked for in Oshkosh
years ago, and asked if there might be anything for me at the stations the
group owned in Madison.
He said the legendary, heritage AM station which they owned
in Madison – which used to be called WISM-AM – had transitioned from playing
Top-40 hits to what was then a relatively new format: talk radio. Perhaps I
could help bolster the station’s news image, which had been impeccable in the
WISM days, but had lost a bit of luster in the new incarnation as WTDY-AM.
The days of Wayne Wallace, P.K. Powers, Bill Short, and
other household names from WISM were gone. The irascible Mark Belling – a
co-worker from my Oshkosh days who now holds forth in Milwaukee and frequently
subs for the world’s biggest blowhard, Rush Limbaugh – had assembled an eager
and talented news team for the station, but they didn’t really have an anchor
with “gravitas”, according to the CEO. He suggested I might be able to help
there.
To shorten the story and keep it moving along, I took a
redeye flight from L-A to Madison, got off the plane, rented a car, and put the
radio on 1480 AM. The first voice I heard was a woman named Toni Denison, who
was doing a newscast. I immediately thought to myself “this woman could easily
be working in Los Angeles.” She had a well-modulated alto voice, delivered at
an appropriate rate, enunciated clearly, had great vocal inflection, and kept
the newscast moving. In other words, easily major market talent. That was my
first impression, having never laid eyes on her. She had big-market talent.
Full disclosure: she and I got married a few years after I
met her.
As I listened across the radio dial to the Madison market on
that first trip in from L-A 28 years ago, I heard a vibrant chorus of talented,
professional newscasters, and quite a few on-air personalities who had, to my
ear, the presence and luster to be working in one of the nation’s largest
markets.
Back then, Madison had dozens of radio news people. The
group I worked for had 8 full-timers and several part-timers. So did the group
my friend Jennifer worked for. And there was another group that had a similar
number of news folks. Public radio in Madison had – and still has – an active
radio news gathering operation. But of
the three commercial groups that had active, competing news departments back in
the late 80’s – well, I’m not sure, but I think there are about two full-time
radio news people at commercial stations in Madison now. It could actually be
one. My apologies if I’m failing to count someone who does news, and only news,
full-time.
As usual, I digress.
The point my friend Jennifer made in her note to me was that
the gentleman in Fond du Lac who spent more than two decades at the same
station, in the same market, was talented enough to land a job in a much larger
market. It’s probably because he didn’t WANT to. It’s far more likely that, as
is the case with so many talented radio folks, he “found a good gig where he
could produce good radio for good people”. Those are Jennifer’s exact words,
far more eloquent than I’m capable of writing.
Some very talented radio folks, making good radio in smaller
markets, could easily go through the steps of sending out their resume and CD,
landing a job in a larger market, packing up all their stuff and moving, and
doing it again in a year or two until they finally figured out they're where they
want to be and they’re tired of moving.
And some have different aspirations:
they realize they’re in a good gig, where the paychecks don’t bounce, they have
reasonable freedom to make good radio without some corporate tyrant breathing
down your neck, and they can send down roots, get married, buy a home, raise a
family, and be an integral part of the community.
Take a look at the people doing news reporting on the
Madison TV stations. They’re talented young folks, by and large, who come and
go. Madison, for them, is a stopping point on a career that will take them
around the nation. They’ll move every year or so, and mispronounce the local
names, exposing their lack of experience in the community. And then there are
those - in most cases, the news anchors, but there are a handful of reporters -
who’ve been around for years and are established members of the community. You know their names. They’re the ones who
know how to pronounce cities like Shawano, Waukesha, Oconomowoc, and Ripon.
You can’t do the same in Madison radio any more, because
there’s only one group owner left in commercial radio that even bothers to have
a “news department”. My former colleague, Robin Colbert, is the news director there,
and now that her dad, John, has retired, Robin is, I believe, the only
full-time news person on the staff. A few of the FM stations have part-time
“sidekicks” who read the news, but don’t actually go out and gather it.
And I know a lot of radio and TV news folks in Wisconsin,
working in our state’s many small markets, who put in long hours at city
council and county board and school board meetings at night and work a long
shift during the day covering news, writing news, and reporting news, who have
the talent needed to land a job in one of the nation’s largest markets. But
they love what they’re doing and have roots in their community.
There is still, as my friend Jennifer wrote to me, a magic
to small market radio – and TV, as far as that goes. Some of these folks are the
shining star of a staff which consists largely of underpaid young people just
learning the trade. Some of them will move on to jobs in the big markets, where
every staff position is held by a highly talented broadcaster.
For some, it’s the journey, not the destination. Kudos.
Here’s hoping you have a great career doing what you love, and that leaving
your job is a decision you’ll make – and not have it made for you by some clueless overlord.