a talk show radio presented as an educational diversion and source of good news Study Bby Radio City (Monday to Friday from 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm). their drivers, Juan Carlos Amador, Daniella Negri and Juan Fernando CrespoThey are on the air for five months.
Amador, producer and musician, was part of one of the programs with which Radio City had started, looking for the moon, and then led the musical space Gaga studio. “We wanted to combine a lot of those good experiences with something more up-to-date and with quality local riders. There is a guest every day, but the format is not an interview, but rather one debate, with relevant people in gastronomy, art, music, sports, politics or travel. “We want people who can inspire others to live new ways to do things differently,” adds Amador.
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On that list, says actress Negri, has been the filmmaker Sebastián Cordero, the actor Alejandro Fajardo, the ultramarathon runner Leonardo Mourglia, the designer Teresa Valenciaand a long list of restaurateurs, singers, athletes and communicators.
All episodes are available at Spotify, in podcast format, for those who want to check the diversity of the guests. “The program is treated with humor,” says Amador, “but we are not disrespectful,” notes Crespo. It is not intended to be a news broadcast or informational or to compete with digital media. “We want to give them the chance to hear something good. We are an educational distraction, because we will keep them distracted with good news, technology, gastronomy, music, movies and entertainment in general”.
About the music style of Study B, the word is eclectic, because the three conductors have different tastes. Amador, a music producer, wanted to fuse the conversation with the widely accepted work he was doing Gaga studio. “We are not the same, we are not contemporary in age, we are people with different tastes, we create constructive discussion tables so that everyone has their proposal.”
In those two hours, the presenters and interviewees navigate through rotating segments, such as a national and international micro-newsletter, both entertainment and more serious news, an update on the traffic situation, a music summit and a film summit.
Crespo points out that each has its strengths. He provides entertainment, current affairs and sports; Negri manages the information inserts for music, roads and news; Amador gives a more professional view of music. And everyone thinks. “Nobody controls a single vote, it’s a discussion table. There are interviewees who are a name and a first, and others who are unknown but bring important knowledge to the program.
Who did you catch your eye on on set? Tom Cruise replies Amador without hesitation. “The most important thing about the interviews is to combine them with country issues, such as the Amazon. We want all our champions in the booth, Chito Vera, to Richard Carapazbut also to everyone who is doing well in the world, and if they are Ecuadorian, even better”.
Is fame important to a platform like Studio B? That’s how it used to be in programs where he worked before, admits Juan Carlos Amador. “Fame was important to take stock of how valuable the interviewee was; Today I think things have changed because Sometimes I interviewed a lot of famous louts, who gave me absolutely nothing.” to give in. “Yes, it happened to me,” he adds, citing a well-known foreign actor. “It gives you a name, but it gives you no substance. There are people who know how to do things better without having to be famous.”
Study B keep mutating and experimenting. The meeting segment will start next week, in which specialists in different fields sit around the table to discuss a specific topic. “It will be a round table, but that topic will have nothing to do with his specialty,” explains Negri. “They are meant to be open topics; The interviewees like that very much, because they open up as people”.
“The idea of this is making magic, and that people (listeners) can travel and have something very cosmopolitan, very open minded in a world that claims to be tolerant but is increasingly closed, there is no comedian who says something without being criticized”. In Study B, adds Amador, the tone could be taken as formal (“we don’t use swear words or vulgarities”), but they want to be able to touch on a variety of topics. And let there be room for disagreement, a sense of humor and amusement. And that’s why one of his concerns is to take care of the atmosphere and the mood on the set. “There is no way to lie about these things, it will reflect.”
For example, they guide people during rush hour, until sunset, people who are between 25 and 50 years old according to reports on social networks, who return home after work and what to do mandatory disconnection of the screen to be able to focus your eyes on the street. It remains to use the ear, the imagination. As Negri says, “It gives you that power that you don’t have with the networks.”
the sign of Radio City It is on 89.3 FM in Guayaquil and 99.7 FM in Santa Elena. It can also be heard online at radiocity.com.ec.
Source: Eluniverso

Paul is a talented author and journalist with a passion for entertainment and general news. He currently works as a writer at the 247 News Agency, where he has established herself as a respected voice in the industry.