Chet Coppock's Fur Coat wrote:
cookie23 wrote:
Might not be popular opinion, but Dan could/and really should have gone national. He is an extremely talented radio host. He should have been the next Greenberg, maybe not on his level, but national for sure.
Why didn't he, his major fault of grandstanding social issues on one side only(hence not only alienating, but making people not listen) and his abuse of callers.
It is okay to be a left leaning person on issues whether it is left or right, but the amount of time and effort(for the love of god just look at his twitter page, its the Huffington Post of retweets) is what kept him local.
Big fish in small pond Dan ended up, which in chicago gives you a great living, cost of living cheaper than the coasts and a nice lifesytle.
But wasted talent in the end in my opinion. In the early days he was hilarious, very quick witted, and the show had me laughing each hour.
After PSU and then with Goff, the venom and anger just turned people off, hence the change. Hate listen is hard to pull down ratings unless you are really popular or a shock jock(i.e Howard Stern in 80s/90s).
Dan LeBatard's ESPN radio show contract runs out this summer and with his patron John Skipper gone, he's made it pretty clear that he doesn't think he's going to be renewed. Bernstein would be an interesting fit for that timeslot (almost the same one he's now on, 9-12 Central) if he could bring back some of the goofiness. ESPN Radio listeners are used to a little bit of SJW, DLB and (when he had the afternoon show, Bomani) are focused on social issues in sports just as much as the games themselves, if not more. But DLB's show is silly as hell while he's doing it.
LeBatard has the mass appeal that Dan doesn't though. Although LeBatard will turn 50 this year, you wouldn't be stupid for thinking he may just be an older sounding guy in his 30's by listening to him. Bernstein sounds old, plays old, and looks even older still. That won't fly when trying to capture LeBatard's listener base, which is ironically a lot closer to what Bernstein and Goff thought they could capture in Chicago: Woke 20-somethings who live on Twitter and consume the show via podcast. What's more, do you really think Dan Bernstein has the balls to go chest-to-chest with the Commissioner of Major League Baseball, Esquire, the way LeBatard did over the Marlins? I don't.