MattParker said:Does anybody need to be producing local news any more? Audience is way down and what's left is demographically undesirable. In several large markets one of the four network affiliates have dropped local news. It's not just Detroit. With or without local news, the Evening News and the Morning Show trail badly. CBS can reach more people with re-runs.
Garrett said:MattParker said:Does anybody need to be producing local news any more? Audience is way down and what's left is demographically undesirable. In several large markets one of the four network affiliates have dropped local news. It's not just Detroit. With or without local news, the Evening News and the Morning Show trail badly. CBS can reach more people with re-runs.
Local news is the main source of revenue for a local television affiliate, it is where a station makes the majority of money. CBS must have lost an unbelievable amount of money on their last local news attempt on the station for them to go this long without local news. One can only speculate that CBS only owns them as a platform for distributing network shows, and probably wishes to sell it. If you browse to the WWJ AM website, it goes to the CBS local web template that all major market CBS TV/radio clusters have gone to. Yet, WWJ TV does not show up on that site, and instead WWJ TV has its own website... I don't think CBS cares very much about WWJ TV.
lugnuts6 said:dont count them out yet...with this new guy the WCBS VP and ND also helming the CBS O&O stations group, ya never know ...
By the way ..look for all the CBS Detroit cluster going under one website just like NYC's CBS stations ... its started with CBSNewyork.com so here comes CBSDetroit.com
kilamanjero said:I guess CBS hasn't had to build a news operation from the ground up since the 1950s with their original slate of O&Os that it just wasn't worth it.
I would have liked to see WWJ-TV enter the news race by "counter programming" the styles of WDIV and WXYZ. Fewer whizbang moving graphics with annoying noises, more detailed news and weather with less sports and Hollywood gossip.
When I arrived in the Detroit market in 1971, there were seven radio stations that mattered. That's it. With a few notable exceptions, the FMs simply simulcast their AM counterparts. It was a simpler world. Today when I checked in with Radio-Locator, there are 79 signals they somehow conclude may serve the market. Yes, I question a lot of them...like 1590 in Marine City...but the fact is, while there are certainly not 79 radio stations that "matter," there are a lot more signals now that slice up the radio pie. TV isn't the only medium to suffer at the hands of too much competition to be healthy for the industry. And as long as WWJ continues to put out a quality product, they will continue to be a major factor in the market.
An undiscussed problem for TV news more than radio, at least among its purveyors, is that they turn away a sizable chuck of their potential audience with a decided political bias. That, as much as any other single factor, has helped send people to the internet to get honest information. Just one recent example of that is the reporting of the planned Million Muslim March on Washington (which drew exactly 21 people) and the almost complete non-mention of the 890,000 (by police estimate) bikers who gathered on the same day. And the list of other such "reporting" is infinitely long. A sizable chunk of America perceives that TV news just isn't being honest with them. So they go elsewhere. This would not be the time for WWJ-TV to invest in a start-up news operation unless the honchos made the conscious decision to be different than the crowd and actually report instead of being a mouthpiece for their favorite politicians.
Technology is always marching forward and its impact cannot be denied. At the same time, some folks refuse to recognize that the demise of the print media is being hastened by the same attitudes that permeate TV news. The market will always even the score.
That type of product would be a good fit here. The WWJ radio operation has a great deal of credibility regarding news and this would enhance both the radio and television product. I suspect that the job posting relates to 'First Forecast Mornings' and that the Free Press seems to have pulled out. They've had Jill Washburn who has a wonderful presence but isn't a hard news type filling in and are likely looking for a CBS anchor to permanently fill that role. THis would be a good time to tie into WWJ radio.
I don't see an evening newscast coming though, nor do I think one is needed unless they will augment the weather done at 11 PM with a quick news rundown.