If we can get back to the real, long-lost meaning of the term "out of the box", I think you'll see my logic. Out of the box, by the way, doesn't mean "be creative". It means see things as your customers (in the case of radio programming, your listeners) see them. We work inside the box (the radio station, in this case). We see things from our
Listeners have favorite radio stations, but not favorite radio groups. Having a rock radio background, I've long known our core audience and the CHR core audience, even though they may share listening with each other, have an almost inverse definition of cool. Meanwhile, great radio stations have long been more than musical commodities - they've stood for certain things in their listeners minds. And they've stood against certain things. In the mid-80's, when we all were concerned about the famine in Ethiopia, a universal issue, rock radio listeners still didn't embrace USA For Africa's "We Are The World".

The great personalities have always been advocates for the listener - period! They weren't schills for clients, they weren't voices for hire, they presented their station and the station's attitude and lifestyle with passion and conviction. They meant what they said and they thought like we thought (or at least they convinced us that they did). So imagine the devoted active rock listener discovering his favorite brother in arms air personality is simultaneously gushing over
All actions and decisions have unintended ramifications. Part of good, long-term decision making is to try to think these through and anticipate them. Unfortunately, when budgets are tight and the pressure is on, we have an amazing (and self destructive) ability to talk ourselves into thinking anything is a good idea. (Sure, I'll stick my head in the oven. That should cut the cost of our natural gas bill, since my head will displace some of the gas, right?) These are trying times indeed, and we're all trying to cut cost in every way we can. But often times the money we save in the short term is spent on another nail in our own coffin. And where's the wisdom in that?
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