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Mar 7, 2012

89.7 WGBH gets a close encounter of the promo kind


A unique new 30-second promo for 89.7 WGBH shows a radio tuned to the Boston station sucked out of a pickup truck by aliens, a la “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”

Watch it online here.

The spot was the most complex ever produced by WGBH, its creators say, and involved driving a truck into the studio (above) and extensive use of computer-generated imagery in post-production to create the homage to the Steven Spielberg 1977 classic. It's currently airing on WGBH 2 and WGBH 44 and the station is negotiating a cable media buy for the New England region to begin at the end of March.

The three-week production and two-day shoot brought to life 89.7’s new “Think Campaign,” which presents the station as radio for discerning listeners. “We wanted an idea that showed that the station was desirable, to differentiate among the competition,” said Paul Bond, WGBH’s associate creative director, who directed the spot. “What would be a sign of that? When even aliens from another world would be so enamored with it, they’d want it.”

That concept “snowballed,” said Jake Messier, marketing director, into a shot-for-shot re-creation of the famous cinematic scene of a pickup at a railroad crossing that has a close encounter with aliens, complete with glowing beams of light, creepy fog, seismic shaking and dashboard-dial needles whirling. The stunned driver watches as his radio is yanked from the dash by invisible forces and floats skyward. The scene fades to the phrase, “Have a close encounter of the thinking kind.”

Bond and Messier declined to reveal the budget for the spot, but estimated that shot elsewhere, it may have cost around $100,000. WGBH was able to produce it for far less using in-house CGI talents, borrowing a truck from a friend of Bond’s, and getting an actor pal of Messier’s from New York City “who worked for very little money,” he said. The 10-foot-tall railroad-crossing light was created for the shoot by the scenery shop Boston University’s School of Theatre. “They built it on a platform and then put it on large bed springs so it could rock, sway and shake,” Messier said. “It worked beautifully.”

The two also credit 89.7’s Managing Director Phil Redo for trusting them to pull off their somewhat daring idea. “Most TV commercials that talk about radio keep blasting call letters and frequency,” Messier said, “but with this one, you had to wait until the end for the payoff.”

As Bond said, “It’s something that makes you think.” (Image: WGBH)

After its near-death, WSIE-FM is back as St. Louis's local jazz station

WSIE-FM, broadcasting from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, is back "from its deathbed," reports the Riverfront Times in St. Louis. The city's only jazz station endured the loss of CPB funding in 2006, the death of a longtime broadcasting veteran, layoffs of all local hosts and a shift to totally syndicated content. However, "in the past year," the paper says, "they have restored local music programming, added online streaming and held the station's first on-air fundraising drive in more than 20 years."

Joaquin Alvarado, four staffers gone from APM/MPR

Joaquin Alvarado, senior vice president for digital innovation for American Public Media/Minnesota Public Radio since January 2010, has been laid off, along with four members of the software development team he supervised. MinnPost reports that the move comes as APM and MPR "grapple with an unspecified end-of-budget-year deficit." Spokesman Bill Gray told MinnPost that the shift will consolidate software jobs in St. Paul among existing staff, "taking advantage of existing technology" instead of custom development.

As part of the changes, Mike Reszler was promoted to v.p. for digital media; he joined MPR in November 2007 as managing editor for online news and is a veteran journalist with experience at Knight Ridder and MediaNewsGroup. In his new post Reszler also oversee the Public Insight Network, APM's growing source database marketed to news organizations (Current, Jan. 24, 2011). "Having an award-winning journalist in charge of PIN strengthens our commitment," Gray told MinnPost, "so the focus on PIN and journalism won't be hurt."