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We are doing a weekly show called "England Swings" on a local cable-access radio station. The show has a focus on music from the UK, and includes current music (including the weekly charts from the UK), and music from the 50s to the present day. We would like to see if there are any opportunities for "bicycling" the show out to college radio stations, where we feel there would be a strong listenership.

2007-01-31 11:08:20 · 3 answers · asked by ukswings 3 in Entertainment & Music Music

We are doing a weekly show called "England Swings" on a local cable-access radio station. The show has a focus on music from the UK, and includes current music (including the weekly charts from the UK), and music from the 50s to the present day. We would like to see if there are any opportunities for "bicycling" the show out to college radio stations, where we feel there would be a strong listenership.

You can find our show at www.fcac.org/webr on Saturdays at 12:00 noon Eastern time.

2007-01-31 11:10:42 · update #1

3 answers

There are many, many college radio stations throughout the country, however most are either NPR-type affiliated stations, which are associated with a university but are professionally run, or are run by students themselves. Student-run stations tend to come under the student-activities umbrella, or in some cases are associated with a broadcasting / media program at the school. The purpose of those stations, in addition to entertaining the audience is to give the students involved, hands-on experience in a radio environment. Therefore, they may be less likely to take outside / syndicated programming because it would take up airtime that a tuition-paying student could be occupying. They also tend not to have budgets for program acquisition.

Additionally, student-run staitons tend to like producing their own original programming - it's a way of letting off some creative steam.

If your show is professionally done, you may stand a better chance selling it to the non-commercial stations that are professionally run. That said, knocking on doors one at a time is laborious at best. To that end, approach some of the syndicators that provide programming to radio stations and see if they would be interested in offering your program to their client stations.

Radio & Records is a major trade pub for the radio business. They have a guide listing program syndicators (http://www.radioandrecords.com/RRDirectory/Directory_Main.aspx). Try checking that out to see if there's anything competitive and if there's anyone that might be able to help you with the "heavy lifting".

Good luck.

2007-02-08 09:48:40 · answer #1 · answered by Ron 2 · 0 0

Contact the college radio stations directly. I wouldn't look on Yahoo! Answers for programming if I were them, there's enough out there already.

However, if you send demo tapes to a few college radio stations, some might have time to listen and could give you a shot. If you're better than what they have, they should go for it.

Good luck!

2007-02-02 07:32:53 · answer #2 · answered by dude 5 · 0 0

The community college stations tend to mirror the tastes of the infants residing interior the section and are inspired via rising developments in music. the objective of the station is for paintings and coaching. commercial stations are in it for the funds, no longer something greater, and pump out the precise 40 schlock 24/7. 0.5 of them are not even operated domestically.

2016-11-02 00:10:28 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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