Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #699: What is there to come back for?

Years ago, I traveled to Indiana to work with a morning show there. It didn’t take long to spot the fundamental weakness of the show – the guy was basically just allowing his female partner to be his live “laugh track.” And the Content was weak to begin with, some lame ‘prep sheet’ type of stuff and what he thought were jokes.

The problem was, she was much better than he was.

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Frost Advisory #813 – Standing In The Same Place Looking In The Same Direction At The Same Thing

What do you see in this picture?

Some will just see four guys and a lady standing on the curb. Not a very compelling picture, either, with the faces of the lady and the guy in the blue jean jacket not even visible.

Others will recognize those four lads as the Beatles, but don’t realize the photo’s significance without the context of when it was taken.

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Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #668: The 3-Break Litmus Test

People often ask me what I listen for as the coaching process begins. There are many facets to an air talent, but I can learn where we need to start by hearing three breaks.

[1] A straight “station business” break. Does this person sound like he/she actually gives a cr*p?

[2] (For music radio) A short break, say, over a brief song intro. Does that person attempt to do anything, or does he/she just do a basic intro? Continue reading

Frost Advisory #812 – The Moral Of The Story

Here’s a clever tip that can help you figure out a couple of things that are really important.

  1. WHY. Why is this something on your station in the first place? Maybe it’s a piece of content from your morning show team. Perhaps it’s a promotion or marketing campaign. A news story, a weather forecast. You get the point.
  2. HOW. Is it done in a way that effectively communicates the moral of the story? Bad stations choose content poorly. Great stations do content that reveals, even in subtle and indirect ways, the purpose of the station.
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Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #667: Sarcasm – No

Sarcasm works okay in certain movies, TV shows, or articles, but if you think sarcasm is a strength on the radio, think again.

For every person that “gets” sarcasm and thinks it’s funny, there are most likely two people that don’t.
And that’s especially true of women. Most women think it’s uncouth, hurtful, and/or stupid. (This is not an empty guess. In my life are my wife and her two sisters, my own two sisters, and two nieces. You should see the looks they give when someone is sarcastic to them.)

“Oh, well then, sarcasm will work with men.”

Don’t be so sure. Just this week, a couple of my friends went through a heated argument when one of them tossed out a sarcastic comment.

So, drop the sarcasm. It pretty much just makes you sound like a smarta$$.

Frost Advisory #811 – A Passion For Spreading The Message

I’ve heard of an author that is willing to sit and watch his books go unsold because apparently for him that is better than changing the essence of what he’s written.

Seth Godin in his book “Linchpin” points out the author’s passion is for his craft, but has no real passion for spreading his ideas. “And if his ideas don’t spread, no gift is received. When an artist stops work before his art is received, his work is unfulfilled.”

These concepts are paradoxical.

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Frost Advisory #810 – Is There Something Going On?

One of my first programming mentors was a man that had learned from Bill Drake, the man that invented Top 40 radio. Howard had worked in New Orleans, New York, and San Francisco. I had worked in Abilene. There was a knowledge gap between us that was as big as the sky in West Texas. I knew I needed to pay attention.

Howard preached to his young air staff, “Do something.” He knew that people listened to the radio station for an experience. He would not allow us to phone it in nor waste a break.

A side note, I would often do things on the air just to get a reaction from Howard.

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Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #665: What’s Unique to You

Here’s a quick start for any radio newcomer, as well as a reminder to broadcast veterans:

Use what’s unique to you.

For example, I’m a musician, having played guitar since I was eleven years old. And it was about that age that my mom taught me to sing harmony.

That led to doing literally hundreds of parody songs in my on-air career. And that was way before we had the technology to just take out the vocal and insert a new one. Or, God forbid, using A. I. to “write” and produce a song for you. I had to recreate the song one step at a time.

And thanks to reading MAD magazine since I was about seven years old, I had a decent sense of what would make a parody song funny. (Those people were geniuses.)

Use what you have that most other people don’t have, and you’ll stand out.