The Assets They Control Are Incredible.
So when people talk about the demise of the labels it sounds a bit ridiculous to me.

Kerry O'Neil
Traditional record label models have always been about creating and owning assets. But with today’s realignments, outsourced services, lower barriers to entry and digital distribution the rules seem to be in a constant state of flux.
MusicRow asked
Kerry O’Neil, a founding member of entertainment consulting and business firm O’Neil Hagaman to add some business perspective and frame the past, present and possible future for these all-encompassing music industry giants.
O’Neil, who specializes in strategic planning and negotiating for many high profile artists and entrepreneurs is not solely a spectator. In 1987 he co-founded Little Big Town Music which was sold to Sony/ATV in 1998. In 1998 he co-founded Big Yellow Dog Music which has already earned 13 No. 1 singles and 10 Top 10 singles. He also co-founded Warner Western Records, a joint venture with Warner Bros. Nashville.
O’Neil is strongly optimistic about the future for record labels, but sees new systems developing with many pathways to success.
MR: Describe the foundation of Nashville’s labels.
Kerry O’Neil: The traditional Nashville standard was something where labels provided financial support and access to national distribution to developing acts that couldn’t afford it by themselves. They also offered a dedicated promotion team with ongoing relationships to get the music introduced. Successful labels needed to have a keen eye for talent.
Based upon their creative decisions they might enjoy periods of growth or contraction. An effective promotion staff was also essential, but no staff could succeed with mediocre music. So A&R and financing coupled with physical distribution and radio promotion were the key points. Now these elements have moved out into their own corners. A&R can be done outside of the label by producers and/or publishers. Elements of the financing part can also be handled outside the label. The costs have come down quite a bit. And access to distribution, with declining physical and ascending digital has never been easier. However, aggregating an audience has never been harder.
MR: Are promotion groups a new label model?
Kerry O’Neil: Consolidation freed many experienced promotion executives who have formed alliances which has created options to take radio promotion outside the traditional label structure. The question is are these roaming promotion companies labels or promo companies? To me, it’s a service. The promo people were never in the ownership business, it’s not a concept they find familiar. But today an artist can own some of their assets, so perhaps these promo companies might also get into the ownership business. Radio is still the way our format’s stars break through so we have a two tier approach driving costs—promoting someone at radio which is tremendously expensive and the funding to manufacture and distribute product across a big nation like the US. The cost base on the digital side is declining, but radio costs are not changing dramatically. So the driving force for success will be a combination of having adequate resources and making good talent decisions. A great talent might even be able to get in without having to go through a major.

If you are relentless about finding great talent, you may find some unique opportunities to succeed without facing the same costs we are used to now.
MR: Does falling sales re-balance the label equation? Can new revenue streams replace shrinking album sales?
Kerry O’Neil: New artists are being signed to 360 deals, but it’s too early to judge the economics because labels haven’t started making money with them yet. However, earning money from multiple platforms could provide more reasons to keep supporting an artist. For example, a single might not be driving album sales, but if it drives merchandise or ticket sales, it could still be a good investment. And SoundExchange is starting to pay meaningful money to labels and artists. It’s now collecting about $250 million a year and growing fast. And if labels get a revenue stream from terrestrial radio it will further help profitability.
MR: What do you make of the fact that one major label is for sale right now and one was just sold?
Kerry O’Neil: There was tremendous interest in Warners which tells you something. For a company to aggregate so many assets is very difficult. It seems to be a money losing model, but the assets they control are incredible and people seem to be projecting it will have significant future value. EMI’s story is yet to be told, but there will be people interested in those assets as well. So when people talk about the demise of the labels it sounds a bit ridiculous to me. The labels are reorganizing how to deploy their resources. And make no mistake, they still have significant resources. They are trying to drive down costs and broaden their platform of income participation. All good decisions. If they get the A&R decisions right—it is still based on that—then 3-5 years from now, they should be positioned to do well. Plus, we’ve come through the worst recession we’ve had since the great depression. Everything over the last two years has been exaggerated to the downside. The labels will exist. They will change and figure it out.

Labels are trying to drive down costs and broaden their platform of income participation. All good decisions.
MR: Why so optimistic?
Kerry O’Neil: Look at the analogy of free TV and cable. When free TV’s market share started to erode people jumped on the bandwagon yelling it was going away. People said they wanted niche programs that were more meaningful to them in a personal way. Today free TV has robust shows like
Idol and
Glee. But you can also launch John Stewart on the Comedy Channel without ever going to Free TV. He becomes a star and gets invited to do guest appearances on network TV. What I hope to see is a strengthening of the traditional labels coupled with a broadening of the base of niche label “channels.” Look at the generational change about how people are finding music. It is not driven solely by radio and retail, but also by the web, social media and whatever comes next. So if you are an 18-year-old entrepreneur with excellent taste in music, you probably aren’t going to raise money to go to radio and/or retail. You’ll play the game using the new tools. Video with a smartphone, audio with your mac, viral marketing, etc. You’ll rely on these interconnections to introduce new music. And if the music is outstanding and the video charming it will move through the system. In addition you will know where your audience is, how to reach them and where to perform live. Eventually you may bump into radio and retail, but you didn’t need their permission to play the game. On Music Row today we don’t make our money this way. But if someone already involved in the industry asks, “How do I make sure I’m viable in my entrepreneurial gambles five years from now?” I’d say analyze these cost structures. If you are relentless about finding great talent, you may find some unique opportunities to succeed without facing the same costs we are used to now.
Kerry O’Neil: Label Logistics
/by adminThe Assets They Control Are Incredible.
So when people talk about the demise of the labels it sounds a bit ridiculous to me.
Kerry O'Neil
Traditional record label models have always been about creating and owning assets. But with today’s realignments, outsourced services, lower barriers to entry and digital distribution the rules seem to be in a constant state of flux. MusicRow asked Kerry O’Neil, a founding member of entertainment consulting and business firm O’Neil Hagaman to add some business perspective and frame the past, present and possible future for these all-encompassing music industry giants.
O’Neil, who specializes in strategic planning and negotiating for many high profile artists and entrepreneurs is not solely a spectator. In 1987 he co-founded Little Big Town Music which was sold to Sony/ATV in 1998. In 1998 he co-founded Big Yellow Dog Music which has already earned 13 No. 1 singles and 10 Top 10 singles. He also co-founded Warner Western Records, a joint venture with Warner Bros. Nashville.
O’Neil is strongly optimistic about the future for record labels, but sees new systems developing with many pathways to success.
MR: Describe the foundation of Nashville’s labels.
Kerry O’Neil: The traditional Nashville standard was something where labels provided financial support and access to national distribution to developing acts that couldn’t afford it by themselves. They also offered a dedicated promotion team with ongoing relationships to get the music introduced. Successful labels needed to have a keen eye for talent. Based upon their creative decisions they might enjoy periods of growth or contraction. An effective promotion staff was also essential, but no staff could succeed with mediocre music. So A&R and financing coupled with physical distribution and radio promotion were the key points. Now these elements have moved out into their own corners. A&R can be done outside of the label by producers and/or publishers. Elements of the financing part can also be handled outside the label. The costs have come down quite a bit. And access to distribution, with declining physical and ascending digital has never been easier. However, aggregating an audience has never been harder.
MR: Are promotion groups a new label model?
Kerry O’Neil: Consolidation freed many experienced promotion executives who have formed alliances which has created options to take radio promotion outside the traditional label structure. The question is are these roaming promotion companies labels or promo companies? To me, it’s a service. The promo people were never in the ownership business, it’s not a concept they find familiar. But today an artist can own some of their assets, so perhaps these promo companies might also get into the ownership business. Radio is still the way our format’s stars break through so we have a two tier approach driving costs—promoting someone at radio which is tremendously expensive and the funding to manufacture and distribute product across a big nation like the US. The cost base on the digital side is declining, but radio costs are not changing dramatically. So the driving force for success will be a combination of having adequate resources and making good talent decisions. A great talent might even be able to get in without having to go through a major.
If you are relentless about finding great talent, you may find some unique opportunities to succeed without facing the same costs we are used to now.
MR: Does falling sales re-balance the label equation? Can new revenue streams replace shrinking album sales?
Kerry O’Neil: New artists are being signed to 360 deals, but it’s too early to judge the economics because labels haven’t started making money with them yet. However, earning money from multiple platforms could provide more reasons to keep supporting an artist. For example, a single might not be driving album sales, but if it drives merchandise or ticket sales, it could still be a good investment. And SoundExchange is starting to pay meaningful money to labels and artists. It’s now collecting about $250 million a year and growing fast. And if labels get a revenue stream from terrestrial radio it will further help profitability.
MR: What do you make of the fact that one major label is for sale right now and one was just sold?
Kerry O’Neil: There was tremendous interest in Warners which tells you something. For a company to aggregate so many assets is very difficult. It seems to be a money losing model, but the assets they control are incredible and people seem to be projecting it will have significant future value. EMI’s story is yet to be told, but there will be people interested in those assets as well. So when people talk about the demise of the labels it sounds a bit ridiculous to me. The labels are reorganizing how to deploy their resources. And make no mistake, they still have significant resources. They are trying to drive down costs and broaden their platform of income participation. All good decisions. If they get the A&R decisions right—it is still based on that—then 3-5 years from now, they should be positioned to do well. Plus, we’ve come through the worst recession we’ve had since the great depression. Everything over the last two years has been exaggerated to the downside. The labels will exist. They will change and figure it out.
Labels are trying to drive down costs and broaden their platform of income participation. All good decisions.
MR: Why so optimistic?
Kerry O’Neil: Look at the analogy of free TV and cable. When free TV’s market share started to erode people jumped on the bandwagon yelling it was going away. People said they wanted niche programs that were more meaningful to them in a personal way. Today free TV has robust shows like Idol and Glee. But you can also launch John Stewart on the Comedy Channel without ever going to Free TV. He becomes a star and gets invited to do guest appearances on network TV. What I hope to see is a strengthening of the traditional labels coupled with a broadening of the base of niche label “channels.” Look at the generational change about how people are finding music. It is not driven solely by radio and retail, but also by the web, social media and whatever comes next. So if you are an 18-year-old entrepreneur with excellent taste in music, you probably aren’t going to raise money to go to radio and/or retail. You’ll play the game using the new tools. Video with a smartphone, audio with your mac, viral marketing, etc. You’ll rely on these interconnections to introduce new music. And if the music is outstanding and the video charming it will move through the system. In addition you will know where your audience is, how to reach them and where to perform live. Eventually you may bump into radio and retail, but you didn’t need their permission to play the game. On Music Row today we don’t make our money this way. But if someone already involved in the industry asks, “How do I make sure I’m viable in my entrepreneurial gambles five years from now?” I’d say analyze these cost structures. If you are relentless about finding great talent, you may find some unique opportunities to succeed without facing the same costs we are used to now.
Reba and Blake Add Second Tornado Relief Show
/by FreemanThe concerts are being presented in partnership with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and proceeds will go to help the relief effort. Both Shelton and Reba are Oklahoma natives and hail from towns neighboring the devastated areas.
“A lot of people lost a great deal in this disaster and it’s particularly close to us because we both consider Oklahoma home,” says Reba. “We wanted to do something and let the people in Oklahoma know that we love them and we’re praying for them during this difficult tragedy.”
“Oklahoma defines who I am and seeing the effects this disaster has had on my neighbors, I knew I had to do something,” says Shelton. “Reba and I have a lot of love for this state and we wanted to do what we can to help. This place is my home and these people are family to us.”
In addition to the concert proceeds, The mGive Foundation has a mobile fundraising campaign that is collecting donations. Mobile users can text “OKGIVE” to 27722 to make a one time $10 contribution.
Photos: Martina on GAC; Shania on Nightline
/by MichelleTo celebrate Mother’s Day, Martina McBride and her three daughters sat down together for an interview for the first time ever. GAC’s Top 20 Country Countdown premieres May 6 at 8:00 p.m. EST. Among the things the girls chatted about were mom’s cooking, mom’s driving and whether or not she sings around the house. Elder daughters Delaney (16) and Emma (13) also talk about the inspiration behind their mom’s current hit, “Teenage Daughters,” and how they feel about the song.
(L-R): GAC host Nan Kelley, Martina McBride, Ava, Delaney and Emma McBride.
• • • •
(L-R): Twain, McFadden Photo: ABC/Lou Rocco
In an exclusive interview, Cynthia McFadden and Shania Twain discuss Twain’s new autobiography From This Moment On, including new details about the domestic violence she experienced as a child, the affair between her husband and close friend, and her subsequent divorce and re-marriage to her former friend’s ex-husband. The interview aired May 5 on Nightline on the ABC Television Network.
Belmont Launches Student Think Tank
/by Michelle(L-R): Eric Guroff, Ross Hill, Chase Geiser, Gia Vangieri, Molly Shehan, and Josh Cypher
Belmont University’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business has announced the launch of Pipeline, an entertainment industry solutions think tank of Belmont’s best and brightest students. The group’s aim will be developing new concepts and solutions and influencing the entertainment and music industry through its creative capital.
CEMB Senior Director of Strategic Initiatives Sarah Cates added, “We believe that Belmont students can be at the heart of creative solutions for the entertainment industry, and we are excited to encourage the next generation of innovators.”
Pipeline will provide a select group of undergraduate students an opportunity to engage in an innovative project alongside a project advisor and be devoted to open dialogue, research and analysis of industry issues over the course of the summer. Nine students will receive summer stipends and funds for research supplies and/or other project expenses. Pipeline students will present their work and findings at informative meetings with industry partners and at Belmont faculty meetings. Assistant Professor of Entertainment Industry Studies Sarita Stewart will oversee the Pipeline think tank.
After an extensive application and interview process, the inaugural Pipeline team has been selected:
Josh Cypher, a junior Audio Engineering Technology major and Entrepreneurship minor
Chase Geiser, a freshman Audio Engineering Technology and Philosophy double major
Kevin Grosch, a junior Songwriting major
Eric Guroff, a sophomore Entrepreneurship major and Music Business, Production minor
Ross Hill, a sophomore Music Business and Entrepreneurship double major
Jessica Pangrazio, a freshman Public Relations major and Music Business minor
Kyara Rafferty, a junior Music Business major and Mass Communications minor
Margaret Shehan, a senior Music Business major
Gia Vangieri, a senior Entertainment Industry Studies major and English Writing minor
Stuart's Late Night Jam Lineup Revealed
/by FreemanThe event starts at 10 pm at Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium, and has become the unofficial start to CMA Music Festival weekend. Tickets are reportedly selling quickly and, as always, proceeds will benefit MusiCares with a portion also going to Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library.
“It’s hard to believe that the Late Night Jam is ten years old,” says Stuart. “I can’t help but think back on the first one. I was nervous; pacing and hoping that we’d have enough people show up. The show ended up being a sell-out and we’ve been going strong ever since. That first show was over 25,000 people ago, and it was also many good deeds ago from MusiCares, and a lot of really magical performances ago from some of my dearest musical friends. Every year I say, ‘How can I top that show?’ Somehow it happens and good things result from it. This year will be no different.”
Over the past 10 years, guest performers at this one-of-a-kind event have included Keith Urban, Vince Gill, Dierks Bentley Charlie Daniels, Porter Wagoner, Neko Case, Old Crow Medicine Show, Jerry Lee Lewis and more.
Eye On Idol (5/6/11)
/by FreemanChalk it up to his first-round performance on Wednesday (5/4). Contestants sang two songs that night, one current song and one from their parents’ generation in the next round.
Jacob’s first-round choice of the Jordin Sparks/Chris Brown duet “No Air” proved to be a major misstep. The lightweight pop hit was a bad fit for his soulful style, and he struggled with his pitch as he attempted to compensate for both singers’ parts. Even an impassioned rendition of the evergreen “Love Hurts” later in the show couldn’t redeem him following that.
Haley Reinhart could really mess things up for the heavily-favored Lauren Alaina, James Durbin or Scotty McCreery. She’s come on like gangbusters in recent weeks and won over lots of voters despite her rough start to the season. After a super performance night Wednesday (5/4) that included unreleased Lady Gaga tune “You And I” and the Animals’ “House of the Rising Sun,” she was safe and it was Lauren’s turn in the bottom two with Jacob.
Lauren obviously didn’t take the news so well, and busted out in tears. Right now Haley has the momentum, so Lauren will have to bring something jaw-dropping to hang around for another week.
Barring something really extraordinary, I imagine that we’re going to see another all-male finale between Scotty and James. They’ve been the most consistently strong all season, and yet still manage to show something new every week.
James’ emotionally naked delivery of Nilsson’s “Without You” likely struck a chord with many viewers. He has a keen ability to break down those barriers between singer and audience, and that’s one more reason he’s going to be very tough to beat.
But Scotty could do it, especially if he stretches himself like he did on Wednesday. He stepped out of his comfort zone and worked the stage Garth-style with Montgomery Gentry’s “Gone,” marking an exciting departure from his more intimate and subdued style.
Win, lose, or draw, I suspect we’ll see both Scotty and Lauren making the rounds in Nashville after the show is over.
WMG Sold For $3.3 Billion
/by adminThe purchase price calculates to about $8.25 per share, slightly higher than yesterday’s closing price of $7.90. The deal still must be approved by WMG shareholders which is expected to take place. Analysts expect the deal might close sometime during the 3rd quarter.
“We believe this transaction is an exceptional value-maximizing opportunity that serves the best interests of stockholders as well as the best interests of music fans, our recording artists and songwriters, and the wonderful people of this company,” said WMG chairman and CEO Edgar Bronfman, Jr. “We are delighted that Access will be the new steward of this outstanding business.”
Unlike some of the larger music companies that bid for Warners, Blavatnik’s offer had the bonus of being able to steer clear of any regulatory hurdles. With the WMG deal done, the possibility exists that Access Industries will now go after EMI’s music and publishing assets.
Anderson & Urban Join Walk of Fame
/by MichelleThe honorees will be recognized officially with the unveiling of commemorative sidewalk markers on Sunday, May 15, at 2:30 p.m. at Walk of Fame Park in downtown Nashville.
The induction ceremony, sponsored by Great American Country (GAC), is free and open to the public. The Music City Walk of Fame was created in 2006 and will now have a total of 50 inductee stars. The plaque medallions for Anderson and Urban will be inlaid on Demonbreun, between 4th and 5th Avenues South.
Details at www.visitmusiccity.com/walkoffame.
Benefits: Swift, Tracy Lawrence, JDRF Golf Classic
/by Michelle• • • •
Tracy Lawrence and his friends in music, entertainment, sports and the arts raised nearly $15,000 for the Susan G. Komen Center–Greater Nashville at the inaugural Golf For A Cure Charity Golf Classic on Monday, May 2. Artists, celebrities, sponsors and VIPs took to the greens, despite the threatening, inclement weather, at Five Oaks Golf & Country Club in Lebanon. In a parade of 50 carts, teeing off along with paying patrons and event sponsors were Lawrence, Darryl Worley, Ira Dean (former Trick Pony member), Bryan White, Davis Daniel, Matt Gary, Ty Brown (of The Bachelorette fame), American Idol alum Lacey Brown, Cory Hildreath (One Night Rodeo), Elbert West, Lucas Hoge, Racing Country radio show host Cathy Martindale and Rockie “Rockstar” Shipes. After the 18-hole game, the Golf For A Cure outing concluded with a night-time reception where guests enjoyed up-close, acoustic performances by Tracy Lawrence, Darryl Worley, Ira Dean, Tiffany, Ty Brown, Lacey Brown, Brooke Burrows, One Night Rodeo accompanied by rolling thunder and bolts of lightning.
Celebrity/patron golfers pose at tourney start. Photo: Hunter Photography.
• • • •
The 2011 JDRF Golf Classic, benefiting the Middle Tennessee Chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, is set for May 9 at the Vanderbilt Legends Club. Slated to participate are WKRN News 2 sports anchor Joe Dubin, American Idol season nine Top 12 finalist Lacey Brown, hit songwriter Rivers Rutherford, up-and-coming country singer Eric Lee Beddingfield, members of the Adam Craig Band and surprise guests. Shotgun starts are at 8:00 am and 1:30 pm. A limited number of slots are still available. Click here for details.
Weekly Chart Report (5/06/11)
/by FreemanWTHO/Thomson, GA PD Steve Ferguson recently had a meet & greet and interview with Bucky Covington and his twin brother Rocky. Bucky’s "Hometown" tour sold out Augusta, GA venue Coyotes on April 22. (L-R): Bucky, Rocky, WTHO’s Steve Ferguson
SPIN ZONE
This had to happen. Following the terrible wave of storms that devastated the South and particularly Alabama last week, Brad Paisley’s “Old Alabama” emerges triumphantly in the CountryBreakout Chart’s No. 1 spot. And remarkable guy that he is, Paisley is donating royalties from digital sales of the track to the Alabama Red Cross for relief efforts. Go forth and purchase for a good cause, people.
The first single from Lady Antebellum’s upcoming third album is “Just A Kiss,” and it looks like a big ol’ hit already. The song was digitally released at the start of the week and CountryBreakout Reporters went wild, causing it to debut at No. 54. Kenny Chesney’s “You and Tequila” featuring rocker Grace Potter also experienced a big debut by picking up 276 new spins to appear at No. 71.
A handful of independent artists are experiencing chart success as well. David Bradley’s “Hard Time Movin’ On” is at No. 28 and still pulling in the spins. Right behind at No. 29 is former Staind singer Aaron Lewis’ “Country Boy.” Newcomer D.J. Miller is showing positive gains at No. 31, followed by Badhorse’s “My Little Man” at No. 32, Mark Wills’ “Looking For America” at No. 33, and Jacob Lyda’s “I’m Doin’ Alright” at No. 34.
RADIO NEWS
Rick Healy has assumed PD duties at KNCQ/Redding, CA as of May 2. He replaces Patrick John, who will continue hosting the station’s morning show as he goes back to school. Reach Healy at rhealy@resultsradio.com.
Upcoming Singles
May 9
Thompson Square/I Got You/Stoney Creek
Glen Templeton/I Could Be The One/Capstone
LiveWire/Tater Fed/LiveWire Records
Bryan Cole/Pride and the Passion
Lady Antebellum/Just A Kiss/Capitol
Zac Brown Band feat. Jimmy Buffett/Knee Deep/Southern Ground/Atlantic/Bigger Picture
May 12
Corey Wagar/Hurricane/GTR
May 16
Burns & Poe/Second Chance/Blue Steel
David Adam Byrnes/She Only Wanted Flowers/Better Angels
Hunter Hayes/Storm Warning/Atlantic/WMN
• • • • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Lady Antebellum/Just A Kiss/Capitol — 54
Kenny Chesney feat. Grace Potter/You And Tequilla/BNA — 71
Kelly Parkes/Girl With A Fishing Rod/Lofton Creek — 77
Greg Hanna/Makin’ Love Real/Pheromone — 80
Most Added
Lady Antebellum/Just A Kiss/Capitol — 44
Zac Brown Band and Jimmy Buffett/Knee Deep/Southern Ground/Atlantic — 36
Kenny Chesney feat. Grace Potter/You And Tequilla/BNA — 23
Billy Currington/Love Done Gone/Mercury — 16
Rodney Atkins/Take A Back Road/Curb — 14
Sugarland/Tonight/Mercury — 13
Joe Nichols/Take It Off/Show Dog-Universal — 12
Jason Michael Carroll/Numbers/For The Lonely/Quarterback — 11
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Lady Antebellum/Just A Kiss/Capitol — 573
Zac Brown Band and Jimmy Buffett/Knee Deep/Southern Ground/Atlantic — 539
Blake Shelton/Honey Bee/Warner Bros./WMN — 391
Kenny Chesney feat. Grace Potter/You And Tequilla/BNA — 276
Dierks Bentley/Am I The Only One/Capitol — 255
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Flat River Band/I’m Alright I’m Ok/FRB — 210
Jennette McCurdy/Generation Love/Capitol — 206
Jordan Carter/Daddy Never Had A Chance In Hell — 204
Landon Michael/This Ain’t California/Big Dog Records — 181
Jadi Norris/Workin’ Man’s Saturday Night/IGO Records — 178
Katie Armiger stopped by KILT/Houston for a Listener Show and caught up with the new morning team, Foley and Thunder (Corey Foley and Greg Thunder). Also joining the team on stage was Cowboy Dave, who helped pitch Katie’s new album to the captive listeners! (L-R): Cowboy Dave, Foley, Armiger, Thunder
Aria Records Nashville artist David St. Romain has been visiting radio in support of his single "Twenty Years Late.” He recently stopped to catch up with the gang at WOKO/Burlington, VT. (L-R): WOKO MD Bill Sargeant, David St. Romain, Aria Records National Radio Promoter Kristen-Cassidy Hoefel, WOKO Morning Round-Up's CK Coin.
Show Dog Universal Music’s JT Hodges stopped by WGAR/Cleveland on his radio tour and hung out with the staff on his tour bus after playing some tunes. (L-R): WGAR’s Bill Conners and Chuck Collier; Hodges; WGAR OM Keith Abrams, Andrea Castillo, and PD Charley Connolly.