https://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/drewmike/85364928741/tumblr_n5du7rPGAw1qbgivn?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

In 2009 a guy named Russell got in trouble for cranking John Denver at three in the morning. The guys tried to track him down ended up talking to three fairly interesting people. 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:

FOND DU LAC, Wis. (AP) — Police responding to a complaint of loud noise have cited a Fond du Lac man for “rocking out” to the music of John Denver. A police who responded to the man’s apartment last week could hear Denver’s music through the door. The officer pounded on the door but the man didn’t answer. Finally the officer found out the man’s name from a neighbor and called to him, bringing the man to the door.

When asked why he had the music so loud, the man said he was “rocking out.”

The Reporter newspaper in Fond du Lac reported that the 42-year-old was cited for unnecessary loud noise. The ticket could result in a fine of about $210.

The late Denver is known for such hits as “Rocky Mountain High” and “Take Me Home, Country Roads.”

http://www.mysouthwestga.com/news/story.aspx?id=403745#.U2649l42Kuc

Delbert Harris Collection

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We have five Delbert clips for you to enjoy!

  1. Download Clip 1 – 1994 – Fleshing Eating Bacteria 
  2. Download Clip 2 – 1994 – Woodstock
  3. Download Clip 3 – 1996 – After coming to Detroit
  4. Download Clip 4 – 1997 – Listener Visits Delbert
  5. Download Clip 5 –  2003 – USA catches Saddam 

Do you have more? We are looking to build our collection of Delbert audio for the archive! Upload them for us here!

Detroit Radio Salaries

In late 2003, The Detroit Free Press reported that Drew & Mike signed a contract that would pay them a reported $2M each. At the time, Mike said he would not confirm nor deny the figure but stated he was happy with the contract reach. The pairs’ agent said that they accepted a “hometown discount” to stay with Greater Media – Infinity and Clear Channel-owned competitors were interested in the dou and would’ve launched a bidding war. The deal also included a share of any syndicated monies should any portion of the show go national, although that never happened. The same article mentions what it believed to be the salaries of select Detroit (then)-leading media personalities: Dick Purtan $5M, Drew & Mike $2M each, Chuck Gaidica, $1.2M, Carmen Harlan $1M+, John Mason $1M. 

In 2006, the Freep reported that Lou Kasman (an A2-based media consultant) estimated Drew & Mike were responsible for “75% to 85%” of WRIF’s $20M in annual revenues – or $15M to $17M. 

In 2007, Drew took his first leave to deal with family issues. D&M’s ratings ultimately plunged, nearly being overtaken by Steve Harvey’s syndicated program. According to the Freep, industry sources believed Drew used this as a bargaining chip for a better pay day. But Dominsky and Doyle’s show soon ended in a contract dispute, and D&M’s ratings stabilized and Drew returned. 

In 2013, the Freep reported that D&M finished 2012 as the #2 show among 25-54 with a 7.4 rating – a 50% drop from 10 years before.

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(1) Even in the 2000s, Detroit had some of the country’s highest paid media personalities.
(2) Yes, the demographics of metro Detroit are shifting, with the market increasingly becoming older and poorer; population growth in 2013 was about half the national average.
(3) The demographics of terrestrial radio and television are shifting, with the market increasingly becoming older and poorer. Audios are shrinking, radio in partially, with the younger generation increasingly turning toward digital music players and streaming Internet radio.
(4) The trend of ditching high-priced talent in favor of lower-priced talent, syndicated programming and sometimes no talent whatsoever is national. It’s happening in NYC. It’s happening on network TV: Jimmy Fallon is reportedly earning between $8M-$12M compared to the $25M Leno hauled in at his peak. NBC was also reportedly interested in expanding the Tonight Show to 90-minutes as its sole late night option; pretty amazing for a network that offered four-hours of late night programming less than 10 years ago.

Alas, it has more to do with the decline of traditional radio than that of the decline of metro Detroit. Sadly, there will likely never be a high-quality locally orientated morning show like D&M ever again.