Christine and Salt, 96.5 TIC-FM, Hartford with Savannah Guthrie

It’s very important for every show to align with whatever the biggest topics are of the day.  That adds relevance to your show and a timeliness that generates more attention than defaulting more often to topics that are evergreen.  I’ve long taken the position that a filter should be:  can this topic also be done next Wednesday?  If the answer is yes, replace it with something going on right now and it will be better.  Salt and Christine, 96.5 TIC-FM, Hartford are institutions in the market.  They know everyone given their tenure and use that to their advantage.  For one more break on the Savannah Guthrie story (if I don’t have to explain the story, that means it’s highly familiar to your audience), they invited on a local TV anchor who’d had a somewhat similar experience as Savannah and had even met her.  Here’s a first-person story that makes the conversation interesting, riveting, and memorable.

Drink and Think

Here’s a fun street/game idea compliments of XYZ with Erik Zachary (syndicated, Skyview Networks) where they quiz people at bars while out Friday and Saturday nights.  Trivia works all the time as it’s vicarious.  When you add people who are tipsy, it gets even better.  They call it Drink and Think!

Karson and Kennedy, MIX 104.1, Boston with Karson’s Testosterone-Fest

Nothing beats self-deprecating humor.  It’s disarming when a talent feels comfortable enough to share a story of a fail and allows others in and out of the studio to mock them.  Sometimes the best character development comes from your flaws and weaknesses.  Masters at this are Karson and Kennedy, MIX 104.1, Boston.  Karson boasted to some golf buddies about his son’s lacrosse team.  Then his testosterone started to show and it got uncomfortable.  Break one includes Karson’s wife, Lana, who’s always money because she puts Karson in his place and the audience loves it.  Quick note – listen to the first 15 seconds of the first break and hear how Karson teases that his wife is coming up before he tells the story to build anticipation and hold on to listeners. Break two are listeners chiming in to advance the story line.  All around, smart, unique, funny character development.

Name That Anthem!

With this being the last week of the Winter Olympics, get on YouTube and download cheesy versions of national anthems.  It could be a fun game where you play a version and the audience has to identify the country as athletes win gold.

Whoopi Walked In and the Audience Walked Out: Why Fame Isn’t the Same as Fit

WKTU, New York just celebrated a milestone 30th birthday in the format.  You may not remember, but part of that history included having Whoopi Goldberg as its morning host.  When I listened back then, it was one of the most confusing radio shows I’d ever heard.  As fate would have it, I met Jim Ryan, who put Whoopi on the brand.  I mentioned I never understood the show, which did not work.  Over the years, Jim and I have talked about this.  I turn Planet Reynolds over to him this week for this excellent analysis explaining why and what’s to learn from that.  This article first appeared in the terrific Barrett Media.  I found it incredibly interesting, so I asked Jim to share it here, too.

What’s your brand?

Very often, the best lessons come from situations that didn’t work out as planned. Twenty years ago, while I was at Clear Channel (now iHeart), we believed talent was the key to making radio a meaningful companion. At the time, Elvis Duran was dominating in New York and expanding into other markets, while Delilah was a staple on our AC stations. Sean Compton, who was handling talent acquisition, wanted a household name for female-targeted morning radio. The decision was made to sign Whoopi Goldberg.

We launched the show with great fanfare across major affiliates like New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Philadelphia. Whoopi was a rare EGOT (Emmy-Grammy-Oscar-Tony) winner; it seemed logical that an award-winning household name would be a hit in morning drive.

However, a disconnect emerged. While Whoopi had a storied career, including her acclaimed role in The Color Purple, much of the radio audience expected to wake up with the comedian they loved in Sister Act. Her vision for the show was more aligned with what she does today on The View. Sitting in the studio most mornings, I saw firsthand the audience wasn’t expecting that direction. Despite the great interviews and funny moments, the show struggled. We learned that in a nine-minute listening occasion, you must be true to your brand. The constant listener calls referencing Sister Act were a reminder that while Whoopi was incredibly talented, that alone wasn’t enough to deliver the expected ratings success.

Regardless of the show you produce, you must ask: “What is the listener’s expectation?” and “What is my brand?” Just as you wouldn’t expect Stephen A. Smith to host love songs or Delilah to act like a shock jock, every successful personality has a defined brand that sets a clear expectation for the audience.

What is your brand? What is the basic plot of your show? If you are part of an ensemble, what is your specific role? Once you answer these, you must run all content through that filter. If you are a “funny” or “feel-good” show, certain topics like politics might be off the table. Conversely, shows like The Breakfast Club thrive on strong opinions. Another example was Mike and the Mad Dog who launched WFAN as the first sports station in America; the show’s success relied on the specific conflict between Mike and Chris. They knew their roles and fulfilled listener expectations every day. Howard Stern, once a “shock jock”, has enhanced his brand to become one of the greatest interviewers in media today. But he uses that brand to be able to ask the questions that nobody else dares to. And gets away with it.

I have worked with many shows where the personalities are unsure of their roles or their on-air relationships. In successful long-running television shows, the audience knows exactly how each character will react. From I Love Lucy to Seinfeld to Everybody Loves Raymond, character friction drives the content.

If you are part of an ensemble or overseeing one, take a minute to ensure each character is clearly defined. Over time, co-hosts can adopt similar mannerisms or opinions, and a re-evaluation becomes necessary. If the friction between characters disappears, so does the drama and the show becomes boring. Long-running shows like Elvis Duran, Dave Ryan, and Mojo have successfully changed co-hosts to stay relevant. The late Kidd Kraddick was so obsessed with show evolution that his program has remained at the top of the ratings for years even after his passing.

Radio shows are only on the air for 20 hours a week, but a strong brand stays with listeners long after they tune out. People think about Howard Stern, Charlamagne tha God, Delilah, and Elvis Duran well beyond their broadcast times.

So, what’s your brand?

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Logan and Sadie, WINK-FM, Ft. Myers, FL with the The Divorcee Divas

A client comes to us with a $1000 gift card for a Valentine’s Day promotion.  The default might be to have listeners text or call us throughout the week to qualify to win it.  Then on Friday, randomly choose one and call them to share the good news.  BORING!  BORING!  BORING!  At Logan and Sadie, WINK-FM, Ft. Myers, FL, we brainstormed the opposite of Valentine’s Day to create story-based content that both those who wanted to win it and those who just come to us for content and connection (99% of listeners) would find entertaining.  That’s always the challenge whenever you have any prize.  Through the week, we will take Valentine’s Day horror stories (opposite #1).  Now, how to decide who wins?  We found two women who were recently divorced (opposite #2) to listen and choose.  Which would you do?  The first idea to get qualifiers via text or phones (BORING!) or an idea that compels stories into your show of the opposite of the holiday?  Here are two examples of what they got.

The Love Song Showdown

You can do this with two cast members who have significant others or two listeners.  Find someone musically inclined and, getting to know the significant others (of the cast or two listeners), have them write and record a custom love song as a Valentine’s Day gift.  The two songs get performed on the Friday show in front of the significant others and then the audience decides which one is better.

Kyle, Bryan, and Sarah, WRAL-FM, Raleigh with Love Him or List Him

There are tons of relationships features out there.  Some around forever (Second Date Update, War of the Roses).  Then there are new presentations.  Take Kyle, Bryan, and Sarah, WRAL-FM, Raleigh who do Love Him or List Him.  Yup, you’re right.  The name is close to the very popular HGTV show, Love It or List It.  That’s on purpose – there is such equity in the TV show name that to use something similar helps it cut through.  It follows the same pattern as all features like this.  Break #1 is the dilemma – a caller had a first date with someone and something happened which made them wonder if they should have a second date.  Callers chime in.  Then you go back with the advice.  Relationships content may be the most universal you can do.  It’s very relatable to everyone, because all of us are in all kinds of relationships.  Here’s a new, more contemporary frame to do a relationships feature if the others are taken in your market (plus the opening jingle is an ear worm).

The Uber Bowl

A big Hot Topic this week is the Super Bowl.  It might be fun to do your parody of this by using…Uber!  Lots of people have Uber Eats on their phones.  Why doesn’t every cast member of the show order the same thing from Uber Eats at the same time during the show?  Then, track to see whose delivery comes first.  That person is the winner of your Uber Bowl.  Plus you’ll have drivers to talk to on-the-air and get some stories from them of deliveries made that went sideways.