Rotation seems to be the only thing that separates Good KJs from Bad KJs.
Singers have their ideas and KJs have theirs.
First of all..What entitles singers to think they have exclusive rights in the rotation?
Did you pay to get in the bar? No....!!!!
Did the KJ charge you a fee to sing? No!!!!
Half of you drink free water!!!!
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Because you bought drinks and food? What about the nonsingers that drink and buy food? They contributed to the cause the same as you.
So far, no singer entitlement based on money.
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So is it based on customer loyalty? Do you come faithfully every week or every karaoke night? Should that entitle you to some reward? If you do, good? What about if you don't?
Should the KJ be responsible for rewarding you? With what or how?
Should it be the bar owners responsibility? He makes out the most from the PAYING customers. Not from the free water drinkers.
The KJ only has a second hand benefits.
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What about the nonsingers that come every week? Who or what kind of a reward should they get? They almost always out number the singers. Many nonsingers are just as loyal.
Let's examine the rotation fairness issue...
I will use math to help you understand the problem.
Many singers feel that being early should be rewarded by singing the most.
Yes & No...
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Singers also want to cap the rotation length. This is good and bad.
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Using math the established norm for the amount of songs played in a 4 hour show is 60 at 4 minutes a song estimated length.
That breaks down to 60 singers. 15 per hour.
Using the following example you will see why a rotation cap will not work or will not help the singers, the bar or the KJ. Which are the main reasons for doing karaoke in the first place.
I get to a show 1 hour early to set up. It takes me an hour to do this.
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So if we use a 1 hour rotation cap 15 singers can sing in the first hour and each hour after that. All the first 15 singers know this so they get there at 8 o'clock to give me their slips for the night. Since they each know there will be 4 rotations during the night, each 1 hour long...they each give me 4 slips to reserve a song in each rotation. That means all the rotations are now full.
Good for the first 15 singers...bad for the bar the KJ and anyone else that wanted to sing that night. Does that seem fair?
Does it help the bar build a crowd knowing that only the same 15 singers will be singing all night long? Hardly.
So to make it more fair for more singers the cap needs to be moved to include 15 more singers. Sounds fair right? Wrong.
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Now instead of 15 singers monopolizing the night now you have 30. Does that seem fair?
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So now the 30 singers get there at 8 oclock and each hand me 2 slips one for each rotation that will last 2 hours. The rotations are full for the night at 8 o'clock.
This still has the potential of keeping the bar revenues low because many people will not show up because they know if they don't camp out on the sidewalk the night before to reserve a place in the rotation, they will not sing. Does that sound fair?
Now tell me what logical choice does the KJ have to make the night more accessible to more people? Remember the bar needs to make money. For 2 big reasons. #1 so they can remain in business and #2 so they can afford to pay someone to provide entertainment.
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So how many singers still think the rotation cap idea is the best option to accomplish the money making goal???
How does the KJ maximize the number of singers to increase the crowd size to accomplish the money making goal????
Sounds like the insertion method is the only reasonable fair way to do this.
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It's not all about the singers...it's about EVERYONE in the bar staying there all night so the bar makes money.
If you say make the singers give you a slip only after they sing, there could be many singers that will miss the next rotation because they didn't sing yet. Is that fair??
My goal is to be as fair to as many people singers and nonsingers as possible. I will never use the rotation cap method. It's just not fair to the singers, the bar owner or me.
I'm listening for other "good" rotation ideas...
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