Interview with Radio Ink (January 2014)
I was interviewed by Radio Ink in January 2014 regarding the NEIL Audio Restoration Project. The interview was never published and the “reporter” never returned follow up emails. Here is the interview assembled from that email thread.
by Michael Allen Smith - February 17, 2016
Who's behind keeping the memory of Neal alive? Why?
FYI it is spelled NEIL, not Neal.
The community of those of us keeping the memories of Neil Rogers alive are on The Neil Rogers Facebook group. Members of the group not only include fans that listened to Neil throughout his 33-year career in Miami, but the group also includes people that worked with Neil.
Once we had this audio, at first it was placed on a file-sharing site for download. Others stepped forward with more audio to share. Then YouTube announced it would no longer cap uploads to 15 minutes. At that point, all the shows went up in their entirety. That attracted more fans, several of which had more audio to share.
The project started with 60 shows from 1999 and now has over 1,700 shows going back to 1987. As more people find the shows, I expect more audio will be located and shared.
What have you put together? A website? FB page, etc.
We have a website (NeilRogers.org), YouTube channel, a Facebook Group, Twitter, Flickr for photos, Google+ and even Pinterest.
How many people engage in all of this?
On an average month the videos on YouTube get 15,000 views. In 2013, over 2.5 million minutes were listened to just on YouTube. This doesn't include MP3 downloads. The Facebook group has over 1,600 members.
What feedback do you get?
People love discovering old Neil Rogers shows that were assumed to have been lost forever. I myself can listen to shows broadcasted years before I discovered the show.
In addition to those who believed Neal was a great broadcaster, there were many others who say he was the meanest person they ever met. What are your thoughts on that?
I never met NEIL, so I can't answer that question.
How long do you plan to keep this going?
When Eric Harold died there was no backup procedure in place. I also saw how the Bob Lassiter fans were left hanging when the Airchecks site lost all their audio. I made sure that wouldn't happen with the Neil Rogers Audio Restoration Project. We have a document shared with core individuals with accounts, passwords, and detailed instructions on what to do should any of us ever step away from the project. Also, all the shows are backed up in at least 5 places — not counting downloads — so there is almost zero risk of audio loss.