If your on-air persona, however, is wholly humorless, this won't help you at all. In fact, it wish hurt you.
If you're Mr. or Ms. Serious for your entire program, it would be be a mistake to end your show on a amusing note.
But if you do share your sense of humor with your listeners, here's several fantastic news:
Your Next 1,000 Shows Are Taken Care Of.
Comedy Show Closes gives you 1,000 amusing route to end your program with a wink, not a whimper.
Some are nonsensical (but funny nonetheless).
Some are expressionless silly.
Some are even....Well....Okay, I'll say it: Several are even as downright corny. (But deliberately so.)
Why Ending With Humor Strengthens Your Show
- It's respectful.
- It leaves your listeners with a smile, a nice feeling. (That's a nice thing.)
- It keeps your listeners in a nice mood. Once they're in a nice mood, they're less likely to change stations. They're too busy enjoying themselves.
- It gives "closure" to the day's program. Simply disappearing on them leaves your listeners with an incomplete, disgruntled feeling. (That's a bad thing.)
- It adds to their anticipation of their enjoyment of tomorrow's program.
- It acknowledges the relationship you have with your listeners.
- Assuming you've already established a rapport with your audience, expression adieu is polite.
Four Years Without Repetition A Show Close
If you activity 50 weeks a year, five days a week, it wish take you four years to use every Show Close in Comedy Show Closes.
Because you're smart enough to note once you used each Close, you'll be able to start all over once again in four years. Trust me: Your listeners won't remember that you already used that Close a few years ago.
Of course, that assumes you're still working at the same station four years later. Not always a really safe assumption in our business.
But no matter wherever you're working, you'll always be able to end your program on a well-planned, fresh, upbeat note.