GAVIN REPORT: ‘HOW TO BREAK INTO BROADCASTING’ . . . AUGUST 24, 1963

From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1963

Programming Newsletter

 

HOW TO BREAK INTO BROADCASTING

 


From the Desk of Bill Gavin  Billboard Contributing Editor

 

” H O W   T O   B R E A K   I N T O   B R O A D C A S T I N G ” is the title of a recently published pamphlet written by Jim Hawthorne, vice-president and national program manager of the Crowell-Collier Broadcast Corporation. Jim has written his pamphlet partly in self defense. A man in his position is inevitably pestered with applications for employment. Few know how to go about it.  Most applicants do not. The majority of job seekers in the broadcasting field, it would appear, have had little or no contact with, except for hearing the end product on their radios.

Some people shouldn’t even bother to apply. Basic minimums include a high school education — preferably college, willingness to move from one town to another, willingness to start at a small job for very small wages and, above all, (with) intense and enduring desire. The main ingredient, says Jim, is hard work, above and beyond the call of a 40-hour week.

It often does not occur to the job applicant that his talent and experience do not automatically speak for themselves. The must be effectively presented. The careful preparation of a presentation is important. It indicates to the prospective employer the type of care and thoroughness that he can expect from the applicant in performing his assigned tasks.

Jim Hawthorne will not accept telephone applications, even if they come from highly qualified people. It is his feeling that a serious application deserves to be put in writing.

A U D I T I O N  T A P E S  A R E  E S S E N T I A L  accompaniments to all applications for air work. Some DJ’s send air checks of their actual performance. Jim advises against it. The whole idea of a tape is to show how original and creative a deejay can be of the restrictions of a particular station policy. The careful preparation of such an audition tape is critical. A perfunctory approach indicates a lack of interest on the part of the applicant and results in a lack of interest on the part of the employer.

Billboard, August 24, 1963
Billboard, August 24, 1963

A  S P E C I A L  O P P O R T U N I T Y   W H I C H  sometimes is not accepted as such, come when the tape is returned with the request to try it again and do it better. Too many applicants regard such a response as a form of polite rejection and are never heard from again. Actually, it means that the applicant has passed many of the tests already and is being considered as a good possibility, provided that he can come up with something more distinctive.

Jim touches a point of show business psychology here which, in my own observation, has stood in the way of talent development. The “ham” in all of us wants applause — approval. Too often the man with talent  prefers not to expose himself to continued objections or corrections. It wounds his own self esteem to find that others may not share his high opinion of his ability. Such a hollow ego finds it difficult, if not impossible, to confess his need for further improvement. A realistic and humble of one’s own talent as a growth potential rather than a summit achievement is something Jim does not mention, but I am sure he would agree.

Our author hammers repeatedly on his basic themes: intense desire and hard work. To which any successful radio man would have to say, “Amen.”

___

(Information and news source: Billboard; August 24, 1963)



Loading

THIS DAY! THE BEATLES CHART U.S. TOP 5: APRIL 4, 1964

(Click this image 2x for larger PC view)

The Beatles Top 5 on Billboard Singles Chart, April 4, 1964
The Beatles hit the Top 5 on the Billboard HOT 100 singles chart, April 4, 1964

A P R I L   4 ,  1 9 6 4 :   T O D A Y  I N   M U S I C   H I S T O R Y

1 9 6 4 :  T H E  B E A T L E S  break all American chart records when the latest Billboard chart (April 4, 1964) shows them with the ‘Top Five’ records in the country simultaneously with: #5: “Please Please Me,” #4: “I Want To Hold Your Hand,” #3: “She Loves You,” #2: “Twist And Shout,” #1: “Can’t Buy Me Love.” Even more incredibly, nine other Beatles’ singles are scattered in various other positions numbered around the “Hot 100.” The Beatles had similarly dominated Canada and Australia’s Top Ten earlier in the month. 50 years ago. The Beatles made music history on this day, Billboard, April 4, 1964.

Today In Pop Music History: April 4, 1964


Billboard; February 15, 1964.
BILLBOARD February 15, 1964

J2P and P2J Ver 1

Loading

WABX-FM: WHEN DETROIT LOST ITS AIRWAVE SOUL (A)

Detroit's Radio Desert (John Fenton) 9-3-1975A MCRFB VIEWING/READING TIP: To fully appreciate this ANN ARBOR SUNDetroit’s Radio Desert‘ (David Fenton; September 3, 1975) feature — To enlarge this image FULL SCREEN — click image and open to second window. Click image again, twice, for EXPANDED, LARGEST VIEW. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size. (Click your server’s back button to return to MCRFB main home page).

Loading

WABX-FM: WHEN DETROIT LOST ITS AIRWAVE SOUL (B)

Detroit's Radio Desert (John Fenton) 9-3-1975 (Part B)A MCRFB VIEWING/READING TIP: To fully appreciate this ANN ARBOR SUNDetroit’s Radio Desert‘ (David Fenton; September 3, 1975) feature — To enlarge this image FULL SCREEN — click image and open to second window. Click image again, twice, for EXPANDED, LARGEST VIEW. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size. (Click your server’s back button to return to MCRFB main home page).

Loading

SOUPY SALES JOINING WNBC RADIO . . . APRIL 13, 1985

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (2015)From the MCRFB news archives: 1985

Former Detroit-based Comic Will Do Mid-days

 

 

 

 

 

NEW YORK — “Let’s just say that something funny finally came between Imus and Stern,” laughs WNBC New York program director Dale Parsons about the hiring of veteran comic Soupy Sales (and formerly TV funnyman Detroit ABC WXYZ television 1953-1966) as the contemporary station’s new midday personality.

Soupy Sales circa 1987 (click image for larger view)
Soupy Sales, 1987 (click image for larger view)

Sales will be flanked by morning man Don Imus and afternoon drive host Howard Stern (formerly WWWW Detroit), and Parsons sees his role as “establishing consistency throughout our dayparts. Sales will further enhance WNBC’s image as New York’s personality radio station. With Soupy, we have three comedic geniuses on the air from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m., but each has his own brand of humor.

“Soupy’s schtick will be familiar in format to Imus and Stern — I’ll expect he’ll play about six or seven records an hour,” says Parsons, who say’s he’s confident the humor that Sales was known for on television will translate well to radio.

While Sales spent several years in the medium before his rise to national prominence on the kiddy show –which carried such lore as when he asked the kids to go through daddy’s pants pockets and send him him all the pieces of green papers with pictures of presidents on them — Sales only connection with top 40 radio came through his lone record hit in 1965, “The Mouse.”

Frank Reed, who had been in the midday slot, moves to evenings when Sales debut April 22. Former evening talent Alex Beebe will exit the station.

(Information and news source: Billboard; April 13, 1985).

Loading