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rec.music.dementia |
On Oct 16, 11:10 am, filkertom <filker...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm not going to bother attempting to make sense of your contradictory
> philosophical ramblings, although a lot of it seems to boil down to I
> Demand Excellent Quality For Free Without Consideration For Basic
> Economics Oh And You Don't Play Enough Of My Brilliant Stuff. If your
> music and your marketing savvy are really that superior, by all means
> apply them to your own circumstance so I can, um, have heard of you.
> I will point out that it's a little more complex than you seem to
> think to walk into CBS or Clear Channel and get a radio show.
> And buying a song on iTunes is not the same as paying broadcast
> royalties on two dozen songs every week.
> And you have a very interesting notion of how recording a radio show
> works. You might try it yourself. It's called a "podcast". They're
> not searchable, either. You want to play individual songs? Buy
> individual songs. Although I suspect you don't want to do that.
> Might cost you something.
> And we at The FuMP are following a very different economic model.
> (Heck, I'm following a different model from The FuMP. Close, but not
> quite the same.)
> And if you don't like the product, then you can simply go away and not
> buy any more of it. Nobody's saying, "Pay two bucks for that audio
> stream or we'll kill this kitten."
> And we haven't even got into your demands regarding audio quality,
> which are directly related to server space, speed, compromising for
> people still on dial-up, etc., etc., etc.
> Dr. D is trying to continue his business in a changing world. As you
> say, there's this internet thing. But he still has to, and wants to,
> conform to laws, rules, regulations, and the need to pay his own
> bills. If it doesn't work, it doesn't work. He'll find that out in
> due time. But I sincerely doubt your "advice" will help anybody
> besides... you.
> (I'm sure, by the way, that Luke and Devo and Richard Cheese are
> tremendously flattered that you consider them in the same league,
> advertising-wise, as Weird Al, who did have his own TV show and is on
> a national tour and at least has a chance of some airplay on regular
> radio.)
> Long story short: You come off like Veruca Salt. The pony isn't
> precisely the color you wanted, and you've got to feed it and take
> care of it, and if you don't like it the pony won't much care if you
> abandon it. It'll manage by itself.
> Even shorter: Grow the hell up.