Following the shooting deaths of 20 children and six adults
at Sandy Hook Elementary school in Newtown, Conn., on Friday (Dec. 14), radio
is doing what it traditionally does best in the wake of such tragedy: providing
listeners a forum to express their emotions and tempering its sound and
playlists accordingly.
"Sandy Hook is 11 miles down the road from us,"
adult pop WDAQ Danbury, Conn., program director/morning host Rich Minor tells Gary Trust at billboard.com. The school's proximity, he says, has made it a
natural partner when the station has conducted community-based promotions.
Minor says, however, that the events of Friday hit
especially hard, considering that WDAQ was amid a fundraising partnership for
the holidays. "I was actually supposed to go to the school tomorrow at
11:30. It's on my calendar," he says.
On-air, WDAQ has radically changed its presentation since
Friday, airing calls from listeners and adjusting its music as needed.
"We're letting people grieve," Minor says.
"It's just me in mornings and Nate Mumford in afternoons during the week,
so, on Friday, we were just trying to get information out. Since then, we're
airing more calls. We've suspended all uptempo music beds under our talk
breaks, as well as giveaways and gossip for now."
The station has also aired songs since Friday that are
normally far beyond the scope of an adult pop station that lives by a code of
hipness. What's hip, says Minor, is what hits home at a given time. "We're
playing a song called 'Aftermath' by Lifehouse with clips from President
Obama's speech in Connecticut Sunday night. We're also airing a special cover
of White Lion's [1989 Billboard Hot 100 No. 3 ballad] 'When the Children Cry,'
also with sound bites."
Appropriate soft AC songs are even in the mix on WDAQ now. "We've played Eric Clapton's 'Tears in Heaven,' Bette Midler's 'Wind Beneath My Wings' and Whitney Houston's 'Greatest Love of All'," Minor says. "I even played a request for USA for Africa's 'We Are the World.' A listener - male, by the way - called during it to give me props for playing it, saying how poignant it seems right now."
Appropriate soft AC songs are even in the mix on WDAQ now. "We've played Eric Clapton's 'Tears in Heaven,' Bette Midler's 'Wind Beneath My Wings' and Whitney Houston's 'Greatest Love of All'," Minor says. "I even played a request for USA for Africa's 'We Are the World.' A listener - male, by the way - called during it to give me props for playing it, saying how poignant it seems right now."
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