Wow! 20 whole commercial free minutes! Really!!

As if that is something to brag about

A local radio station is advertising in one of the local newspapers (heck, it could be both, but I doubt it given the bias of the radio station in this case and the bias of the newspaper) and is trumpeting:

20 MINUTES COMMERCIAL FREE EVERY HOUR (during the prime morning drive time show).

Really?!?!  You want to trumpet that?  That's worth making a centerpiece of your advertising and promotions for your product?

20 whopping minutes of commercial free time every hour during your prime show?!!?

Oh, wait, must be a misplaced modifier somewhere in there.  Actually I'm sure that is the case, and I'm sure what the advertisement is trying to say is that every hour contains at least one 20 minute period free of commercial interruption, but what does that mean for the remainder of the 40 minutes in the hour?  Ooops, pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.  Don't look over there.  Look here.  Look here at the 20 minutes.  Ignore the 40 mintues that are jammed and packed full of commercial spots every 4 - 7 minutes, totalling about 25 minutes out of the 40 minutes that remain in the hour, if not even more.

Somehow the station (and it's poor listeners) will pay for that 20 minutes of commercial-less time, and the way they'll pay is by cramming even more commercials into the remaining time.

Actually, as it turns out, the station in question (who shall remain nameless for now) is famous for doing far worse by using a 'time condenser' device for radio that helps to eliminate some of the natural pauses and other 'dead air' time that is in a regular radio show so that can speed some of their nationally syndicated programming up by 2 - 6 minutes every hour.  Huh?  To make it clear, they basically fast forward, ever so slightly, the nationally syndicated content so they can have the show finish in say 54 minutes instead of 60 in the hour and then they squeeze in another 2 - 6 minutes worth of local advertising.  They do that for at least 6 hours worth of programming daily, and possibly more (I've not listened to them regularly in quite a while as that whole process and the effect it has on the voices of the talk radio hosts, etc.)

It amuses me to think that the clowns that run this station, and market their product, think that 20 minutes of time uninterrupted by commercials is some great feat.  If they chose to, they could easily air about 40 - 50 minutes worth of programming that isn't interrupted by commercials, but that won't happen as it would mean giving up too many advertising spots and too much revenue that they apparently don't believe they could make up by having more listeners and higher advertising rates for the limited periods when commercials are aired.

Finally, even the 20 minutes of commercial free time is a misnomer if not an outright lie as leading into the 20 mintues there are periods with plenty of commercials, and during that same 20 minutes there will be traffic reports brought to you buy, or weather sponsored by, or the broadcast will be coming to us from --insert sponsor name here-- studios and such.

Yeah, 20 minutes of commercial free time is something to brag about.

{ Borat }

NOT.

{ /Borat }

7,049 views 6 replies
Reply #1 Top

I hate commercials.

~Zoo

Reply #2 Top

I hate commercials

Sadly even with satellite radio you can't escape 'em or at least you can't escape commercial like interruptions.

About the only way to avoid 'em is use an iPOD or pop in a CD and leave it repeating.

Reply #3 Top
Launchcast Plus! No commercials at all, skip songs, rate music so it will play what YOU want... fun!

Yahoo Music
Reply #4 Top

On station here promotes commercial free listening from 8:30 to 10:30 each weekday morning.  I listen on occassion.

Actually it is a good idea, if they really did it.  I zone out radio when the commercials come on, and if I get busy, dont listen when they stop.  SO I would listen more (although the advertisers would probably not be happy).

Reply #5 Top
I bought a Tivo to avoid commercials, and now, they are trying to squeeze them back in. I guess paying $12.95 a month to skip past commercials no longer applies. Same goes with Sirius radio. You listen to one of the talk channels (and I dont mean just talk radio, I mean any one of the others not playing music) and you will hear commercials.

Go figure. For some reason the whole thing starts to remind me of Alex's rehabilitation treatment in A Clockwork Orange...
Reply #6 Top
I'd rather be bombarded by commercials between songs that the insipid, idiotic and grating chatter and forced guffaws of self-important DJs who think their every word is both fascinating and hilariously funny but is really just so much pap and drivel.

Whatever happened to actually announcing the songs?

I've got one thing to say to most DJ's....STFU already,