Russ Edmunds writes: 
"Having loans to pay off, I had to work outside of broadcasting, and as things 
played out, I never did. I can't believe too much in that scenario has changed 
other than the relative numbers of dollars involved."

Russ's comments are valid and all too accurate. I recall the Springfield, Ill., 
station owner who reminded members of the Illinois News Broadcasters 
Association during a panel discussion on local news operations that radio 
management can always hire someone for the "psychic pay," which translates as 
"the thrill of being on the air." 

In 1970, I was hired as news director at WMIX in Mt. Vernon, Ill., at a pay 
scale that was a little lower than I was making in Cambridge, Mass., but 
considerably higher than what I could have made in Dallas-Fort Worth. The 
station owner was a martinet, but he was on his death bed, and, to protect my 
wife's teaching job, I stuck it out. The new owner, after the old fellow died, 
cleaned out the staff, except for me, for he had done some research and 
recognized the respect with which I was held. However, his idea of the proper 
pay scale was more psychic than monetary, and in the remaining nine years I 
spent at WMIX, I received one pay raise. (I did get a per-game stipend for 
football and basketball play-by-play and one local grocer felt I was the only 
one on the staff he could trust with his ads, so I got the commission on a 
fairly healthy grocery contract) but I was limited in my opportunities because 
I continued to protect Janice's teaching job. In 1972, the local newspaper o!
 ffered me the city editor job at about $700 a year less than I was making at 
WMIX. Nine years later, the newspaper offered me the same job at $3,000 more 
than I was making at the radio station (including the pbp stipend and the 
commission on the grocery spots) and there were regular raises plus an 
occasional performance bonus at the newspaper. Even so, the local newspaper 
editorship did not pay as much as Janice was making as a fifth-grade teacher. 
Still, we lived comfortably but frugally, saved enough so that teacher 
retirement, Social Security and a tiny pension from the three years the 
newspaper was owned by a chain that had a retirement program has kept us from 
hitting any thing but the interest on our nest egg, even with extensive travel 
around the nation and around the world.

Lucky us.

I lost count of the number of news directors WMIX hired after I left. I've not 
been in Mt. Vernon to hear what the station is doing now, under the same 
ownership, for the past six and a half years, so I don't know if its major 
money-makers, the 15-minute newscasts at 8 a.m., 11 a.m. and 12 noon, are still 
being aired. 

And, Russ, if you had managed to get enough local experience to get a decent 
job in a major market, you'd have been subject to the whims and the fancies of 
management which made its decisions on about 25-percent ratings, 25-percent 
talent and 50-percent some unexplainable psychic phenomena. (Unless you were a 
First-Class Licensed engineer or a crackerjack ad salesman.)

John Callarman, KA9SPA, Family Genealogist, Retired Newspaper Editor, 
DX-oyente, Krum TX (AKA Qal R. Mann, Krumudgeon)
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