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Godell, Tom J.'s avatar

Tim,

You may recall that Heat was such a spectacular failure that for years afterward when any national network proposed or distributed a new ‘turkey’ it was quickly labeled “ReHeat”.

Another public radio turkey was NPR’s late 70s weekend two-hour arts showcase. I can’t remember the name of the show now, but it was dreary. The host was one of the members of the then-exceptionally-popular Firesign Theatre. I think it was Phil Proctor. Firesign's records had been so funny, so iconic that it seemed like a brilliant idea to have him host an arts showcase. But he was spectacularly unfunny in his new role, and the programming never quite jelled. I remember only one segment, after Leopold Stokowski died. NPR had acquired the rights to a bunch of Stoki’s last concert broadcasts with the BBC. I tuned in because I loved Stoki’s work, but the performances were utterly unremarkable.

The show failed quickly. I’m not sure that it lasted even 13 weeks. But it was clearly the model for Performance Today. And I’ll never forget an early PT feature devoted to sky-writing. On the radio.

That said, NPR in the 1970s produced some incredible programs that have never been equaled: Oscar Brand's Voices in the Wind, Alec Wilder's American Popular Song series, and Options in Education to name a few.

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Abby Goldstein's avatar

I think its interesting that all your examples are content/programming examples. How about the great on-line auction debacle of the early aughts, where stations invested a ton of effort into an on-line auction with a vendor who ran away with the money? And where are we with the Morning Edition "power hour" where stations attempted to raise all the money for the day in 1 hour? Any fundraising or marketing campaign turkeys out there? Happy Thanksgiving!

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