It's sad to hear the traffic reports slip away. They still serve a great purpose, and seem to be mostly a win for stations that run them.
The first major station to drop traffic was KUOW in a very head-scratching decision about five years ago. The worst part was that after cycling through a number of Metro Networks anchors in the AM drive, they'd finally settled on Harmon Shay, who sounded great with the NPR format.
With so few live and local drive time shows these days, traffic reports, which once were integrated right into the show (remember Steven Kilbreath doing traffic at Metro when the T-Man first started? These reports would run for five minutes with T-Man giving him a hard time throughout. Eventually Kilbreath joined the show outright) are just inserted without even an intro. Just don't have the same impact.
And like many things these days in radio, the quality of the talent giving the reports has seriously declined.
It used to be that traffic was a great way for a new talent to break in, picking up overnight shifts, etc, to gain experience. The reporters on drive time, however, were pros pros. I don't know that that is the case any more.
If you tuned in ten years ago you'd hear people like Bill Ogden, Angela Kirby, Shane Kobane, Bonnie Brown, Leslie Larkin, Heather Stark, Lan Archer, Jeff French, Cheryl Iler, Lisa Wood, Lisa Foster, Anna D, Sara Johnson, Mary Whitish and Gina Tuttle giving the reports. These guys were absolutely rock solid.
Look around... who's doing the reports these days? Gina's still there, so's Shane Kobane, Mary Whitish and Heather Stark. The rest have moved on or retired. And the new crop just isn't as good. Laurie Hardie can't get through a single report without tripping up. Deanna Joy's voice isn't that great. Judith Larson puts me to sleep. Alex Myers, a young guy breaking in, sounded great for a few years, but has also moved on.
Meanwhile, KIRO has gone with Kimmie Klein, who someone reported, is not a Total Traffic reporter but instead is from a different, competing service. And she's terrible. Just think, a decade ago KIRO had a threesome doing traffic during drivetime (Tony Scott in studio, the great Steve Sanders in the chopper and Metro's Shane Kobane in "air 2") and now they're down to a giggly sound girl with no gravitas doing her reports from a booth.
No wonder no one wants to talk about radio any more. Its just depressing.