WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
How many success stories are their in Chicago sports talk radio as a whole? Less than 10 people total perhaps? There was maybe a decade golden era before the business started to slow due to the Internet. And this is evidence of a conspiracy to keep black men off the air?
A lot more than 10 depending on what you consider to be a success.
If you want, we can make a list of the people who got more than 2 years on a show that was on from 6am to 6pm. I believe there is one person, and that was a guy who literally helped establish The Score. Unless I'm missing someone, ESPN has never had a black man on daytime programming. As I said though, I'm not a radio historian.
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
As your heroes on woke radio would say "small sample size".
It's not really a small sample size. Chicago sports radio is nearly 30 years old. There is only one true success story, and even he has been absent from sports radio for longer than I've been listening.
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
Jiggetts had success, and then was given chance after chance. Monsters and Money in the morning ring a bell?
What radio station was that on? Also, how long did it last?
As I've said though. Consider Jiggetts a success. I think that's fair. The problem is when you try and come up with who was the second most successful.
It hasn't been 30 years though. It's been 25 for the Score and maybe 20 for MVP? And how many open spots for local talent based on your metrics? MVP was largely national programs in the early years, and it has had a national morning show for every year. So you are fighting for at most 5 shifts at two stations over two decades tops. As for retreads look to Norm Van Lier who had afternoon drive on MVP then the morning show on the Score.
Even though they do not fit your metrics Lawrence has been on forever, and so has Jonathon Hood. Tommy Williams had a long run. Outside of the very narrow field of Chicago sports radio, there seems to be quite a few black voices in the mainstream sports and entertainment media. Perhaps they have better sources than the people who told Jason that the NFL players were going to boycott the first week of the NFL last year, that Gar Foreman was going to be fired, of that Dwayne Wade was signing with the Bulls in 2010 or any of the other breaking news reports this supposed insider had that proved to not be true.
Goff was given two years plus during shifts that fit your metrics, and he allowed echo chamber laziness to be his voice. The results were predictable.