Smerconish famously put his conservative credentials aside last time and 
endorsed Obama for President.

Kevin
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Chris Hahn 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2011 5:01 PM
  Subject: RE: [RC] Time for Radical Centrist Radio ?


  Interesting.  If, in the unlikely event, I happen to stumble across 
Smerconish, I will give him a listen.

   

  Chris

   

   

   

  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
  Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2011 2:27 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Cc: [email protected]
  Subject: [RC] Time for Radical Centrist Radio ?

   

  Avlon calls himself a Radical Centrist but it must be understood that

  what he actually means by the term is liberal-lite. Not so shrill as most

  Leftist Democrats, willing to listen, a little, to conservatives. Be at least

  somewhat creative, etc, not really RC as we understand it. Yet he is

  willing to use the terminology, as are more and more people.

  "Radical Centrism" is starting to gain traction as a concept

  even if it is not very well understood yet.

   

  I have  no idea what the content of the radio show is that Avlon is promoting

  in this article. Regardless, best guess is that he is onto something.

  Judge for yourself.

   

  Billy

   

  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

   

   

   

   

   

   



  The Right-Wing Talk-Radio Flameout
  Ratings for Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and other hyperpartisans are declining 
as listeners seek honest talk from hosts like Michael Smerconish over angry 
rants. A more civil conversation will add value to our political debate, writes 
John Avlon. 
  by John Avlon  | May 12, 2011 6:38 PM EDT 

  There's new evidence to suggest a demand for something different than 
hyper-partisanship in the world of talk radio and political media.

  It's not just the sunset of the Glenn Beck Show on Fox or the dispatch of 
Keith Olbermann from MSNBC to CurrentTV. It's the shuttering of a pioneering 
conservative radio station and data showing the demographic decline of Rush 
Limbaugh.

  In contrast, growing numbers of listeners are tuning in to independent voices 
who can be honest brokers in debates and don't just angrily parrot talking 
points.

  In February, I wrote a column asking whether right wing talk radio was dying 
and ruffled some feathers in that flock. A more accurate means of measuring 
listeners showed that conservative talkers' ratings had either declined or 
flatlined in the heat of the 2010 election, while the world-journalism focus of 
the John Batchelor Show had seen a decided ratings climb. Now, a look at 
radical centrist Michael Smerconish's national ratings growth since the start 
of the year provides more evidence of this emerging market.

  First, here's a snapshot that puts the shift in perspective: Just days after 
the 2010 election, the nation's first all-conservative talk radio station, KVI 
in Seattle, switched back to a classic-rock format after 17 years. Its 
innovation had become media saturation-and music became an appealing 
alternative to the drone of a dozen Rush Limbaugh imitators.

  Limbaugh can sell bedpans and resentment forever. But the demographic trend 
is not his friend.

  Rush is a giant in his field, reaching more listeners than anyone in 
political talk, but even he has seen erosion in his numbers. Analysis of 
industry data shows that in market after market, Rush's ranking has declined 
decisively over the past five years among advertisers' coveted 25-54 age group. 
For example, in Charlotte, North Carolina, Rush fell from sixth to 12th between 
2005 and 2010. In Portland, Oregon, he fell from fourth to eighth. In San 
Francisco, he's seen a similar decline. Among listeners 65 and older, Rush 
remains No. 1. He can sell bedpans and resentment forever. But the demographic 
trend is not his friend.

  It's not that "the angry white guy conservative political talk format"-as 
consultant and former Clear Channel talk radio programming director Gabe Hobbs 
calls it-is over. It's just got little room to grow, going forward.

  "Rush has been around for 23 years. They're not necessarily making new 
Ditto-heads. You have to fish where the fish are," says Hobbs, who helped 
launch the radio career of Glenn Beck, among others. "We're singing to this 
choir, that's great, they're worth a lot of money and they do a lot of 
wonderful things, but boy, there's a lot over here we could do."

  "This civil and smart approach-like [John] Batchelor and Michael Smerconish 
and some other shows-to me is kind of a 'duh,' '' adds Hobbs, indicating that 
it should have been obvious long ago. "The numbers that NPR is drawing clearly 
portends to something. I've seen it myself in research. It's the tone; it's the 
approach. Some people don't want to be engaged at that loud, angry level-that 
hard right or left ideological approach where it's my way or the highway."

  A Republican turned Independent who supported President Obama in 2008, 
Smerconish is a pioneer, putting himself out in the world of daytime political 
talk radio as a radical centrist, surrounded by the old hyper-partisan voices. 
He is currently an island, but he is far from alone, reflecting the 41 percent 
of American voters who now identify as Independent but are seriously 
underrepresented in our political and media debates.

  This is no mushy middle. Smerconish memorably described his policy profile in 
The Washington Post as "someone who supports harsh interrogation, thinks we 
should be out of Iraq but in Pakistan, doesn't care much if two guys hook up, 
and believes we should legalize pot and prostitution." (Note the Pakistan 
comment-Smerconish has been beating that drum long before most Americans had 
heard of Abbottabad.)

  "I choose subjects and offer my opinions without regard to any party's 
talking points," Smirconish says. "I have plenty of opinions, but they do not 
fit neatly into those faux, talk- and cable-created ideological boxes. And it 
matters not to me whether the audience at the other end is a conservative, 
liberal or independent-I don't check registration cards."

  Since he gave up his Philadelphia morning drive-time slot in January to focus 
solely on his nationally syndicated radio show, Smerconish has been seeing 
startling success: "I've been letting my Independent freak flag fly and people 
are responding."

  In Austin, Texas, Smerconish has increased the station's drive-time ratings 
in the 25-54 demographic by more than 150 percent over the first three months 
of 2011, according to Arbitron ratings. In his evening Dallas time slot, 
Smerconish has increased the ratings among men age 25-54 from 0.5 to 2.7-a 500 
percent increase. Over in St. Cloud, Minnesota, Smerconish has led a 146 
percent-share jump for his station. In Syracuse, New York, he increased the 
station's ratings for adults 25-54 more than 500 percent in the first three 
months of 2011.

  In Boston, he's more than doubled the ratings among women-an audience often 
alienated by angry talk radio. "If women are listening to it, then two things 
are probably true," reflects Ian Punnett of Minneapolis' MYTalk107. "First, 
they're creating word of mouth about it because it's something fun. Second, 
it's something which might reflect the popular culture more than any one 
particular political ideology. It's more informative than it is exclusive. It 
creates a bigger tent."

  The industry is starting to get the message. "What I feel has really shifted 
in the past six months is that we're getting calls from stations saying 'I want 
to do talk but I don't want it to be angry. I don't want it to be really 
polarizing. I don't want it to be just about politics,'" says Amy Bolton, 
senior vice president and general manager of news and talk for Dial Global, an 
independent, full-service radio network company providing national advertising 
sales representation for more than 100 independent producers and syndicators, 
including Michael Smerconish. "You hear program directors out there saying, 
'It's like listening to somebody bang on the same piano note over and over and 
over again.'"

  What's triggered this shift? In large part, it's an emperor-has-no-clothes 
realization driven by data. The radio industry changes in the way that ratings 
are measured, from diary-style self-monitoring to a more scientific method 
known as PPM. This changed the focus from rewarding voices with hardcore 
fans-like Limbaugh's "Ditto-heads"-and reflected more accurately what people 
actually listen to throughout their day.

  "The hard left-wing stations and hard right-wing stations that were voted on 
by their fans in the diary-which was more of a popularity contest-seem not to 
be doing so well," explains Jack Swanson, the program director at San 
Francisco's KGO-AM. "Nationwide, I think we are seeing a trend of some weakness 
in the hard right and the hard left on both sides."

  "We're seeing some things like Smerconish and some things like John Batchelor 
doing better," Swanson continued. "Is this a trend? I don't know. I do believe 
we're at a tipping point in talk radio, though. It's not just a Left or a Right 
or a Republican or Democrat thing. It's a million points of light out there on 
the Internet in terms of the discussion of ideas and ideals. And one size 
doesn't fit all anymore."

  One day we just might look back on the past two decades and see the 
hyper-partisan group-think that has disproportionately dominated talk radio as 
odd. The signs are all around us, from the PPM ratings that give a better idea 
of what people actually listen to during their day, to the implosion of Air 
America's "Limbaugh of the Left" model while the thoughtfulness of NPR enjoys 
great and growing listener loyalty.

  This is still an emerging market, a rebellious project. But a more civil, 
smarter conversation will add value-not venom-to listeners' lives. It will 
bring light, rather than just heat, to our political debates. And in the 
process, it will more accurately reflect the essential diversity of American 
life

  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org


  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to