Beardown wrote:
Let's just look at this realistically. They said they are gonna have producers. They have 6 hosts lined up. Jesse and Spaceball are employed. How are they gonna be able to pay all of these people a decent salary and make a profit? It just can't be done. They just won't have the listeners. Thus they won't have the sponsors.
I'm just taking a guess that all of these hosts will get 40k. Not too many people would do it for anything less I don't think. Hell, it might be less for some guys. But let's go with that. I'll add up the cost.
Jesse - 80k
Webber - 40k
Greenstein - 40k
Producer - 15k
Hood - 40k
Doyle - 40k
Producer - 15k
Chet - 40k
Boom - 40k
Producer - 15k
Payroll = 445K
That's 445k just for the god damn staff. Can they make that money in a year? No fuckin' way. The more I think about it, the more I think it might be less than 40k for the hosts. That would mean they are paying 80k per show. Maybe North says they'll get raises if they can get an audience. Maybe they're doing it for next to nothing just to try to make it work. For all of these guys it's worth a shot. They don't have anything else lined up.
Everyone has their reasons for signing on for something like this. Here's some info from a Ray Mancini bio: "Thanks to expert legal advice, the former champion was also able to keep 75 percent of his $12 million in purse money, which enabled him to pursue a broad range of interests in retirement. More recently, Mancini realized his Hollywood dreams, appearing in as well as producing a handful of films. In addition, he gained new fans as a fight analyst for the Fox reality series, Celebrity Boxing. Mancini currently resides in Los Angeles, California. He owns the El Campeon Cigar Company and operates two movie production companies."
For him, it sounds like what the hell, let's give web radio a try, sounds interesting. Coppock's on the downside of his career, a guy like Weber is (he hopes) on the upside, Greenstein's a newspaper writer and needs something else, Hood and Rogers are kind of in the middle of careers that probably really haven't taken them where they want to be as radio hosts . . . like I say, everyone has their reasons for wanting to do this, and that's fine. I just think until truly portable Internet becomes the NORM for MANY, MANY more people, like in cars, taking it out to the garage while doing a chore or something, this is going to have a hard time. If and when its time will come, I will leave to the more technologically-astute people here to debate. If, as someone suggested, North is ten years ahead of his time, he'll be about 67 when this makes it! Good luck! Of course, even if tomorrow, webio became the hottest thing going, you still have the matter of would people want to listen to this stuff North & Jesse will be putting out--and that, as they say, is a whole 'nother story.