Bill Virgin's Radio Beat August 24, 2006

Includes archive of Bill Virgin's columns fromJ une 2006 - March 2009

Postby radiofan » Thu Aug 24, 2006 8:27 am

B]Thursday, August 24, 2006

On Radio: Seldom is heard a comedic word

By BILL VIRGIN
P-I REPORTER[/B]
What's so funny?

Not radio, these days.

The passing last week of Robert "Madman Moskowitz" Baron, who for years hosted a program of spoken and music comedy, is an unhappy reminder of how little comedy remains on the radio.

To be sure, some would argue that there's plenty of humor still there, particularly in morning drive-time shows, and hosts such as Garrison Keillor on NPR.

But comedy used to have a much greater presence throughout the broadcast day. Comedy songs and novelty records from performers such as Ray Stevens and Dickie Goodman (he did records in a Q&A format, with cuts from songs providing the responses) regularly appeared on the charts. Nationally syndicated shows such as "Dr. Demento" and the "National Lampoon Radio Hour" were regular features of radio schedules.

Stations even ran comedy serials, "Chickenman" and "Secret Adventures of the Toothfairy," produced by legendary ad man Dick Orkin (you can hear his voice on a current series of ads for PugetSoundHelpWanted .com). Longtime listeners remember signature bits and recurring characters done by radio personalities ranging from Lan Roberts to Robin & Maynard.

Pat Cashman, one of the last practitioners of radio comedy, says character-driven bits and sketches and nuanced humor have "definitely disappeared."

Why so?

Michael O'Shea, onetime Seattle radio programmer and now head of All Comedy Radio, says that with the advent of morning drive-time teams, radio stations concentrated the time they devoted to humor or comedy in that segment. But while listeners may want the information-and-conversation orientation of those shows for their morning commute, the rest of the day they use radio as a "mood button," he says. "After 9 a.m. (stations) had to become music-intensive."



The homogenization of radio gets much of the blame from critics like Jef Jaisun, a professional photographer who achieved his bit of music-comedy fame with his song "Friendly Neighborhood Narco Agent" (written 40 years ago and a major hit on "Dr. Demento"). "People like to laugh, they like to hear (new) stuff and have it presented in a creative fashion," he says. But "most program directors, station managers and bean counters don't want to take chances," particularly when it involves social commentary that may irritate someone, as musical satire and spoken-word comedy often do.

O'Shea, whose network offers long-form comedy formats and short-form segments, said he's seen a revival of interest in comedy with some stations offering a short comedy selection in afternoon drive. But that's not the same as devoting considerable time to producing two-minute segments that could run throughout the day, as Orkin did with serials heard on stations coast to coast.

While radio may have moved away from comedy, Cashman wonders if listeners have: "I don't know that the percentage of people who want or don't want a good laugh from the radio has changed."

In other radio notes:


There is one new comedy outlet on radio: One of the HD channels Entercom has launched in Seattle. The lineup includes comedy on the HD channel for KKWF-FM (100.7), live rock on KISW-FM (99.9), roots and blues on KMTT-FM (103.7), world music on KNDD-FM (107.7) and urban adult contemporary on KBSG-FM (97.3). The HD channels can be heard on radios specifically designed to receive them.


News from the talk-radio world, with one program staying at KKTH-AM (770), another leaving. KKTH announced that Rush Limbaugh's program has been signed for another three years; it currently runs 9 a.m.-noon. But Laura Ingraham's show is moving to KKOL-AM (1300) 6-9 a.m. weekdays beginning Monday.


It may not be coming to a theater near you, but a recently released movie has been making the festival rounds and is available on Amazon.com. "G-Sale" (as in garage sale) is a mockumentary in the style of the Christopher Guest films "Best in Show" and "Waiting for Guffman." What's notable about it is the cast has several notable current and recent Seattle radio personalities as performers: Mary White (morning co-host on KKWF-FM), Scott Burns (former morning co-host on KBSG-FM) and Matt Riedy (former morning host on KWJZ-FM).


KBCS-FM (91.3) has added one program aimed at the hip-hop audience and changed the time of another: "Zulu Radio" now airs at 10 p.m. Saturdays and "Hard Knock Radio" has been added at 1 a.m. Saturdays.


Don Riggs' guests on "Introspect Northwest" at 7 a.m. Saturday on KPTK-AM (1090) and 7 a.m. Sunday on KMPS-FM (94.1) include former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.


Tami Kosch's guests on "Community Matters Weekend Edition" at 6 a.m. Sunday on KPTK-FM include Pete Earley, author of "Crazy: A Father's Search Through America's Mental Health Madness."


The Sunday edition of Jim French's "Imagination Theatre," heard at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday on KIXI-AM (880), includes a new Sherlock Holmes story.


"Voices of Diversity" at 6 p.m. Wednesday on KBCS-FM looks at the payday loan industry.

P-I reporter Bill Virgin can be reached at 206-448-8319 or billvirgin@seattlepi.com.

Bill Virgin's Radio Beat in the Seattle P-I[
Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who couldn't hear the music.
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