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Sports Commentaries |
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...with David Bernstein.
Q & A
Once again our friends at BMS asked one of the most important
men in Talk Radio some candid questions about the state of the biz and how
talent should approach the advancing of their careers |
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BMS: What are the most common
mistakes you hear when you listen to Sports talk radio?
DB: Hosts who believe that every issue has
to be right or wrong. There is no right and there is no wrong. It’s all opinion,
how you express it, and how you engage the listeners.
BMS: As a programmer, what do you want to
hear in the first couple of minutes of a show?
DB: I want to hear somebody who watched the
same game as I watched. Who reads the same sports pages as I read, and who forms
opinions about the same things that I form opinions about. I want to know that
the people I listen to are on the same page and have the same interests that I
do; even if our opinions don’t agree. Then, I assess and compare my opinions to
those of the host.
BMS: At what point do you want to hear
interaction with a guest or a caller?
DB: The only person I ever want to hear
talking to himself is me. I get bored real fast.
You have to have an incredible story to tell me to keep me engaged without
hearing other voices. One voice is monotonous. Listen to how short David
Letterman’s monologue is.
Put your premise on the table and then let me hear other people talk about it.
BMS: How should a host get the most out of a
caller?
DB: Be curious. The host should ask
questions such as, ‘’Why would you think that?’’
‘’Why would anyone with an allegiance to a team do what you’re suggesting?’’
It’s two people engaged in a conversation, and it should be an honest, natural
flow of questions; and when your curiosity is satisfied, say goodbye to the
caller.
If the caller is interesting, bizarre, nuts, then you let the caller do the
entertaining, otherwise, keep the call short.
BMS: We have to always take the listener
somewhere. How do we lead people to that destination?
DB: We have to know where the caller wants
to go or we’re leading them to the great unknown. I don’t want to lead the
caller to a place they don’t want to go. Look at what’s in the news, look at
what people want to talk about and talk about it.
BMS: What do you suggest people in small
markets do to generate calls?
DB: Every few minutes say, ‘’I just want you
to know that while I have the privilege of hosting the show, I like when this is
a show for everybody, so if you would like to call and make a comment and not
get into a debate, that’s o.k. also. You can’t tell me you’re listening to what
I’m saying but you don’t have an opinion about it.’’ Make the caller realize
they have opinions and invite them to get vocal about it and you have to make
them realize you’re not going to jump down their throat, it might make them that
much more comfortable to call in.
BMS: Good talk radio consists of knowledge
and entertainment. Is it a 50/50 split between the two?
DB: I would say the show should be 60%
entertainment and 40% knowledge. This is not to diminish the importance of
knowledge, it’s to emphasize the fact that this is entertainment, it’s a show.
The goal is not to convince someone who is the better third baseman, the goal is
to make people enjoy listening and want to come back.
BMS: How much non-sports should be included
in a show?
DB: All talk radio is made up of good
stories and interesting information that listeners want to hear. Give it to
them. You should leave out the stats and talk about the philosophical issues
that business people have to deal with every day. Every sport is a business.
Talk about things that are relevant to the people who support the teams.
BMS: For PD’s who are reading this; what are
differences they should be concerned with between their morning and afternoon
shows?
DB: There are fewer differences than how
things used to be in radio. Morning drive used to be about helping you get set
up for the day. Now, people catch so much sports at night that they’re already
set up for the day. You know what happened in sports, you know who’s pitching.
Get right into the heart of the matter. Morning shows are fast paced, and
afternoon shows are becoming that way. You’re better off targeting all your
shows to have the rhythm and excitement of a good morning show.
BMS: Regarding updates, what’s over-kill per
hour?
DB: Two is plenty. You don’t need three.
Three tells the listener, ‘’here’s more of what you’ve already heard.’’ This
fulfills the cycle of listening and the material becomes repetitive, which
drives the listener away.
BMS: What style do you prefer when listening
to an update?
DB: I will remember an entertainer before I
remember a sportscaster or newscaster every time. So, if you can give me an
entertainer who will make me smile and keep me informed, I’ll come back for
more. If it’s somebody just reading updates out of a newspaper, I can do that
myself.
BMS: How much play-by-play do you want on
your station?
DB: If there’s a major team in your area and
you can get that team, that’s great, however, people come to sports talk radio
for a number of things, and you can go to non-sports stations to listen to a
game. There are plenty of talk stations and plenty of music stations that aren’t
sports stations, but they carry the local teams. It’s the play-by-play itself
that people will tune in for, not the programming around it. So if you’re doing
sports talk, and you don’t have play-by-play, it’s no big deal. They’re not
coming to you for play-by-play. They’ll find their team. They’re coming to you
for sports-talk. Give them what they’re coming for. Play-by-play is a nice cume
builder if it’s a good team, that’s all.
Radio veteran David Bernstein has been the Vice President of Programming at
Air America since March, 2007. Prior to joining Air America, he was best known
as the program director at New York radio station WOR from 1995 to 2002.
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