bobbyss wrote: » How long has Finnegan been doing the same programme? Surely a shake up is needed there? John Bowman has been doing the same programme at the weekend on RTE radio for about 100 years. His ratings must be very good to sustain that. Presumably Finnegan's are good too. Otherwise the Boss would axe him.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Remind us who The Boss is.
sgthighway wrote: That Station should have been cleared out years ago. I tried to listen to it as I love local sport but the people on the breakfast show finally got me to switch to another station. Even when I did listen I would turn it off when the KF show came on. I reckon the main audience are probably in the 60 plus category. My Mum would have it on Sunday Mornings at home while preparing the dinner. The hurling commentary from Sean Walsh does be class. It is a tough time for media outlets at the moment as money from advertising has probably gone down and particularly hard for Sports Journalists. AFAIK Galway GAA had a big stake in it back in the day. Is that true?
bobbyss wrote: » Yes. The presenter at the weekend , forget her name, she does country music with requests for songs. Anytime I tune in the requests seem to take more time than any song played. I tune out again quickly. But country music? It must have an enduring popularity around the county in fairnes. (This does not seem to be reflected nationwide on RTE's schedule however.) But request shows are a throwback to yesteryear. Can't think of any programme on RTE that has such a focus on requests as her programme. Her ratings (I assume they do some research into this) must be good though to be doing that for so long.
Galwayguy35 wrote: » A good start would be to get rid of those two Molly and Ollie that are on at 6.30am.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Ah lads, ye are forgetting the death notices, the staple offering of Irish radio.
JoeA3 wrote: » Valerie Hughes. It's the "Hospital" request show isn't it? There is a proportion of the population out there that love it - the "Country n' Irish" music and hospital requests. My parents generation and older... i.e. her demographic is strictly the 65++ age group. I've wondered what will happen when the 65+ year olds are no longer with us, but there's obviously plenty out there who still want to listen to her... KF is the station CEO... so why wouldn't he keep trucking on? Who's going to tell him he's past his sell by date? (which he most definitely is imo). I haven't heard the morning show since Jimmy Norman used to do it... be careful what you wish for. I just looked at their schedule there and its very threadbare now alight. Only ~4 daytime presenters and the weekend schedule is repeats and live sports (of which there is precious little at the moment). You'd wonder what the longer term future holds for stations like this.
sgthighway wrote: » That Station should have been cleared out years ago. I tried to listen to it as I love local sport but the people on the breakfast show finally got me to switch to another station. Even when I did listen I would turn it off when the KF show came on. I reckon the main audience are probably in the 60 plus category. My Mum would have it on Sunday Mornings at home while preparing the dinner. The hurling commentary from Sean Walsh does be class. It is a tough time for media outlets at the moment as money from advertising has probably gone down and particularly hard for Sports Journalists. AFAIK Galway GAA had a big stake in it back in the day. Is that true?
Cube98 wrote: » I think it's a case that people don't realise how good we have a thing until it's gone.
Deleted User wrote: » Molly and Ollie are great. Only radio show I enjoy in the morning time
Gadgetman496 wrote: » In 2006, the Connacht Tribune newspaper bought the station outright, having previously owned 27% of it.
what_traffic wrote: » Interesting info there Gadgetman496, knew about GAA but not the Archbishop. Now that the Connacht Tribune have moved to Liosbaun, do you know if they have plans to consolidate the offices of the Radio Station with the Paper?
Cube98 wrote: » I'd say the money from the death and funeral notices is the only income stream not to have gone off a cliff in recent years. I can't imagine many businesses pay a premium to advertise on radio anymore when they can do it for free on social media, ditto with classified ads.
JoeA3 wrote: » GB FM in its early days (1993 ish) at least was a bit like Classic Hits 4Fm today. Middle of the road “classic hits” format. It was a very successful reboot.
GerardKeating wrote: » I remember (early naughties) the "City" frequency had seperate programming in the evening, a show at 7pm in the classic hits style i seem to remember.
JoeA3 wrote: » Other than local sports (of which there’s virtually none right now), death notices and twee local politics via the intolerable KF, it’s hard to see what the station has to offer nowadays. What’s the point of middle of the road music / request shows when Classic Hits / Today FM do it with much greater resources? What’s the point in 20 minute news bulletins when you are just relaying the same reports that Newstalk did 10 mins previously?
Wompa1 wrote: » Have to say, I do a stupid little Podcast that covers a handful of news stories. I heard KF's show a couple of weeks ago, I was impressed by how much he covers in a show. I'm sure he has a staff but even so to be able to switch topics like that and have people on for interviews, read out texts, cover some local stories. I only do it once a week for a 20-30 minute Podcast and find it exhausting. Not sure I'd listen to it every day though but probably not aimed at me.